Abstract

Since the first introduction of the landing obligation (a.k.a. Discard ban) in 2015, the EU Mediterranean fisheries are facing some unforeseen challenges. The demersal bottom trawl fisheries, being the most significant contributors to the so-called 'discard problem', are confronted with the greatest challenges. Data from the Italian and the Greek fleet, spanning over two decades (1995–2015), were analysed with the intention of revealing the diversity and heterogeneity of the discard problem, especially for regulated species. Species composition of discards, as well as discarding rates, were shown to be irregular, fluctuating among areas, depth strata, seasons and years. Although fish dominated the discarded gross catch in weight, benthic invertebrates (other than commercial cephalopods and crustaceans) were the taxa discarded almost exclusively. The established minimum conservation reference size was largely ignored by fishers. From a management point of view, the present investigation suggests that the recently established Discard Management Plans lack scientific evidence (given the high intrinsic variability of the parameters and confusion regarding the rules) and provide exemptions from the landing obligation that will in practice allow the average Mediterranean bottom trawl vessel to continue business as usual. Moreover, detecting if these rules are actually respected is an almost impossible task for the Mediterranean control and enforcement authorities. Incentivizing the adoption of fishing technologies and practices that reduce pre-harvest mortality and post-harvest discards, while avoiding damage to sensitive marine species and habitats, seems the only way to move forward, rather than dealing with the problem after it has occurred.

Highlights

  • European Union (EU) fisheries are responsible for a high level of discarding (Kelleher, 2005; Feekings et al, 2012), which is attributed to low-selectivity fishing techniques, excessive fishing effort, low enforcement and a patchy species distribution (Johnsen & Eliasen, 2011).The European Commission (EC) has associated the ‘discard problem’ with poor economic performance and a significant component of marine ecosystem functioning (EU, 2009)

  • During the period 1995-2015, 35 vessels (16 Italian and 19 Greek) were monitored during years where onboard observations were available in three Mediterranean geographical sub-areas: FAO GFCM GSA 09: Ligurian and North Tyrrhenian Sea, GSA22: Aegean Sea and GSA23: Crete

  • The number of species discarded was not regressed against fishing depth because there was a clear difference in the sampling protocols among the two GSAs, with the Greek observers focusing mainly on target species related to the EU Fisheries Data Collection Framework (Tables S2-S3)

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Summary

Introduction

European Union (EU) fisheries are responsible for a high level of discarding (Kelleher, 2005; Feekings et al, 2012), which is attributed to low-selectivity fishing techniques, excessive fishing effort, low enforcement and a patchy species distribution (Johnsen & Eliasen, 2011).The European Commission (EC) has associated the ‘discard problem’ with poor economic performance and a significant component of marine ecosystem functioning (EU, 2009). European Union (EU) fisheries are responsible for a high level of discarding (Kelleher, 2005; Feekings et al, 2012), which is attributed to low-selectivity fishing techniques, excessive fishing effort, low enforcement and a patchy species distribution (Johnsen & Eliasen, 2011). EU, 2013) pursues the gradual elimination of unwanted discarding practices at sea, through the gradual introduction of a “landing obligation” (Art. 15) for regulated species(originally scheduled to start from 2017 for demersal fisheries in the Mediterranean), which are subject to a Minimum Conservation Reference Size (MCRS) and/or. EU fisheries are currently transitioning to reducing discards at sea and bringing all undersized catches of tabulated stocks to land obligatorily.This represents a fundamental shift in the management approach of EU fisheries, switching from landings monitoring to catch monitoring.

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