Author:
Scott Molly,Royer Mark,Hutchinson Melanie
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Bycatch mortality in longline fisheries is a major contributor to global declines in shark populations. The duration of time that an animal is hooked and the impacts of hooking on behavior affect the likelihood of mortality. However, limited information exists on the behavior of sharks to longline capture because of difficulties observing hooking events. Using a fortuitous recovery of an archival satellite tag, we describe the movement of an oceanic whitetip shark (Carcharhinus longimanus) and examine the behavior prior to its mortality in response to hooking on a longline.
Results
A 1.5 m (fork length) C.longimanus was tagged and released in good condition by a fisheries observer following initial capture on a US longline fishing vessel. After release, the shark resumed normal vertical behavior within 5 h. Over 198 days, the shark undertook wide-ranging movements throughout the Pacific between Samoa, Niue, and Tonga. The shark was hooked by a second longline vessel while conducting routine yo-yo diving between 0 and 120 m depth. For the first hour after being hooked the shark exhibited high swimming activity with rapid vertical movements between 20 and 40 m indicative of an initial struggle against the line. After this, the shark struggled at the surface for approximately 5 h, until it succumbed to exhaustion and died on the line.
Conclusion
Fight time has a strong influence on the mortality rates of sharks captured in commercial longline fishing operations. Data obtained from this shark offers further understanding of capture behavior and time to mortality on a longline for C.longimanus which may assist managers as they work on options to reduce mortality rates for this threatened species.
Funder
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Bycatch Reduction Engineering Program
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Computer Networks and Communications,Instrumentation,Animal Science and Zoology,Signal Processing
Reference50 articles.
1. Mandelman JW, Skomal GB. The physiological response to anthropogenic stressors in marine elasmobranch fishes: a review with a focus on the secondary response. Comp Biochem Physiol A: Mol Integr Physiol. 2012;162(2):146–55.
2. Hutchinson M, Siders Z, Stahl J, Bigelow K. Quantitative estimates of post-release survival rates of sharks captured in Pacific tuna longline fisheries reveal handling and discard practices that improve survivorship. NOAA PIFSC Data Report DR-21-001. 2021.
3. Talwar BS, Bouyoucos IA, Brooks EJ, Brownscombe JW, Suski CD, Cooke SJ, Grubbs RD, Mandelman JW. Variation in behavioural responses of sub-tropical marine fishes to experimental longline capture. ICES J Mar Sci. 2020;77:2763–75.
4. Ellis JR, McCully Phillips SR, Poisson F. A review of capture and post-release mortality of elasmobranchs. J Fish Biol. 2017;90(3):653–722.
5. Mather FJ, Day CG. Observations of pelagic fishes of the tropical Atlantic. Copeia. 1954;3:179–88.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献