Abstract

Seabirds are declining on a global scale, and this trend is concerning as they play an important role in the marine ecosystem. The decline is due to multiple reasons, but harvest fisheries are a major contributor. The impact of fisheries, however, appears to vary; demersal trawlers cause mortality of many birds in some areas and very few in others. Fishery-dependent monitoring is required to understand this impact on seabirds, and particularly to better understand the variable impact of demersal trawling. We employed a targeted observer program to gather data on seabird assemblages, catastrophic interactions with trawl vessels and predictors of vessel attendance by the seabirds. The latter is a useful proxy for catastrophic interactions and provides information on potential mitigation. Throughout the program period, 1040942 seabirds from ~21 species attended New South Wales (NSW) ocean demersal trawlers. These species included 7 species of petrel and albatross listed by the IUCN, including the flesh footed shearwater Ardenna carneipes and wandering albatross Diomedea exulans. Two catastrophic interactions were recorded, and intrinsic and extrinsic predictors of vessel attendance (e.g. offal discharge and wind, respectively) were characterised. The results of the study will provide information to managers, with the goal of ensuring the sustainability of NSW ocean trawling—in particular its coexistence with threatened seabirds. The NSW Ocean Trawl fishery appears to directly harm very few seabirds which is not always the case when considering worldwide trawl fisheries. Predictors of attendance such as space, time and offal discharge can potentially be used to mitigate the attractiveness of trawlers to seabirds.

Highlights

  • The harmful effects of various anthropogenic activities have combined to make seabirds one of the most threatened groups of birds (Croxall et al 2012, Dias et al 2019)

  • The demersal Ocean Trawl Fishery (OTF) operates off the New South Wales (NSW) state coast on the east coast of Australia

  • We considered 3 sub-fisheries of the OTF: (1) OTFS, (2) Northern Fish Trawl Zone 5 (OTF Central, OTFC) and (3) Ocean Prawn Trawl (OTF North, OTFN)

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Summary

Introduction

The harmful effects of various anthropogenic activities have combined to make seabirds one of the most threatened groups of birds (Croxall et al 2012, Dias et al 2019). Fisheriesrelated mortality of seabirds mainly affects the Procellariiformes, including albatrosses (Diomedeidae) and petrels (Procellaridae) These birds are longlived, have a low annual reproductive output and mature late (Warham 1990, Baker et al 2002, Arnold et al 2006). Their large body size means that strikes with trawlers and gear are usually harmful (Sullivan et al 2006); many seabird species are threatened (Croxall et al 2012, Gallo-Cajiao 2014, Dias et al 2019) due to the combined effects of life history traits and incidental mortality. Studies are needed to determine the numbers and community structure of seabirds attending fishery vessels, as this information forms baselines for monitoring and indicates the risk of mortality or catastrophic interaction (Pierre et al 2012) and other ecological risks (e.g. Furness 2003)

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