Abstract

Abstract Incidental mortality (bycatch) in fisheries remains the greatest threat to many large marine vertebrates and is a major barrier to fisheries sustainability. Robust assessments of bycatch risk are crucial for informing effective mitigation strategies, but are hampered by missing information on the distributions of key life‐history stages (adult breeders and non‐breeders, immatures and juveniles). Using a comprehensive biologging dataset (1,692 tracks, 788 individuals) spanning all major life‐history stages, we assessed spatial overlap of four threatened seabird populations from South Georgia, with longline and trawl fisheries in the Southern Ocean. We generated monthly population‐level distributions, weighting each life‐history stage according to population age structure based on demographic models. Specifically, we determined where and when birds were at greatest potential bycatch risk, and from which fleets. Overlap with both pelagic and demersal longline fisheries was highest for black‐browed albatrosses, then white‐chinned petrels, wandering and grey‐headed albatrosses, whereas overlap with trawl fisheries was highest for white‐chinned petrels. Hotspots of fisheries overlap occurred in all major ocean basins, but particularly the south‐east and south‐west Atlantic Ocean (longline and trawl) and south‐west Indian Ocean (pelagic longline). Overlap was greatest with pelagic longline fleets in May–September, when fishing effort south of 25°S is highest, and with demersal and trawl fisheries in January–June. Overlap scores were dominated by particular fleets: pelagic longline—Japan, Taiwan; demersal longline and trawl—Argentina, Namibia, Falklands, South Africa; demersal longline—Convention for Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) waters, Chile, New Zealand. Synthesis and applications. We provide a framework for calculating appropriately weighted population‐level distributions from biologging data, which we recommend for future fisheries bycatch risk assessments. Many regions of high spatial overlap corresponded with high seabird bycatch rates recorded by on‐board observers, indicating that our approach reliably mapped relative bycatch risk at large spatial scales. Implementation of effective bycatch mitigation in these high‐risk regions varies considerably. Although potential bycatch risk appears to have decreased since the early 2000s, albatross and petrel populations from South Georgia and elsewhere are still declining, emphasizing the need for much improved observer coverage and monitoring of compliance with bycatch regulations.

Highlights

  • Industrial fisheries have widespread impacts on marine ecosystems (Pauly, Watson, & Alder, 2005)

  • Overlap with both pelagic and demersal longline fisheries was highest for black‐ browed albatrosses, white‐chinned petrels, wandering and grey‐headed albatrosses, whereas overlap with trawl fisheries was highest for white‐chinned petrels

  • Hotspots of fisheries overlap occurred in all major ocean basins, but the south‐east and south‐west Atlantic Ocean and south‐west Indian Ocean

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Industrial fisheries have widespread impacts on marine ecosystems (Pauly, Watson, & Alder, 2005). Fisheries bycatch has been identified as the most serious threat to many large marine vertebrate species, including marine mammals, birds, turtles and fishes (Lewison et al, 2014; Phillips et al, 2016) Removal of these upper trophic‐level predators has downstream effects on wider ecosystem functioning (Estes et al, 2011), and the immediate reduction of bycatch to negligible levels is crucial to halt their ongoing population declines (Lewison, Crowder, Read, & Freeman, 2004). Large marine vertebrates such as seabirds are long‐lived, with life‐history traits (e.g. delayed maturity, low reproductive rates), that make them sensitive to small increases in mortality resulting from bycatch in fisheries (Lewison et al, 2004). We quantified overlap by (a) region, (b) fishing fleet, and (c) temporally (by year and month), which should enable better targeting of bycatch mitigation measures and monitoring of compliance across fisheries, fleets and ocean basins

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call