Abstract

Common dolphins (Delphinus delphis) are responsible for the large majority of interactions with the pole-and-line tuna fishery in the Azores but the underlying drivers remain poorly understood. In this study we investigate the influence of various environmental and fisheries-related factors in promoting the interaction of common dolphins with this fishery and estimate the resultant catch losses. We analysed 15 years of fishery and cetacean interaction data (1998–2012) collected by observers placed aboard tuna fishing vessels. Dolphins interacted in less than 3% of the fishing events observed during the study period. The probability of dolphin interaction varied significantly between years with no evident trend over time. Generalized additive modeling results suggest that fishing duration, sea surface temperature and prey abundance in the region were the most important factors explaining common dolphin interaction. Dolphin interaction had no impact on the catches of albacore, skipjack and yellowfin tuna but resulted in significantly lower catches of bigeye tuna, with a predicted median annual loss of 13.5% in the number of fish captured. However, impact on bigeye catches varied considerably both by year and fishing area. Our work shows that rates of common dolphin interaction with the pole-and-line tuna fishery in the Azores are low and showed no signs of increase over the study period. Although overall economic impact was low, the interaction may lead to significant losses in some years. These findings emphasize the need for continued monitoring and for further research into the consequences and economic viability of potential mitigation measures.

Highlights

  • Direct interactions between marine mammals and fishery operations pose a threat to the sustainability of many marine mammal populations and could be detrimental to fisheries

  • Common dolphins were responsible for 66% of the reports of interaction, followed by spotted dolphins (19%) and bottlenose dolphins (10%)

  • Except for the research previously conducted in the Azores, that produced a preliminary characterization, we are not aware of studies investigating cetacean interaction in the pole-and-line tuna fishery

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Summary

Introduction

Direct interactions between marine mammals and fishery operations pose a threat to the sustainability of many marine mammal populations and could be detrimental to fisheries. These interactions may result in the injury or death of marine mammals, damage to the fishing gear, reduced catches and increased time spent in fishing operations [1,2,3]. Publication fees for this open access publication were supported the FCT Exploratory Project (IF/ 00943/2013/CP1199/CT0001) and by SMRCT/ DRCT

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