Interaction frequency of seabirds with longline fisheries: risk factors and implications for management

Author:

Zhou Can1ORCID,Brothers Nigel2

Affiliation:

1. Visiting Researcher, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, 77840, USA

2. Marine Ecology and Technology Consultant, Wonga Beach, Queensland, 4873, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Fishery bycatch poses a serious threat to seabird populations globally. Traditional haul-only post-capture observations are inadequate and inefficient to document seabird bycatch due to the substantial bycatch loss known to occur. Pre-capture observations offer an alternative by documenting seabird interactions leading up to captures. Based on the long-term large-scale dedicated field observations, this study revealed significant risk factors for the pre-capture stages of the seabird bycatch process in pelagic longline fisheries using Bayesian methods. Rough sea conditions were found to correlate with more seabirds following fishing vessels. Species identity, density effect, inter-species effect, and sea condition were found to significantly affect how frequently seabirds aggregated around a fishing vessel engage in bait-taking interactions. Intra-species competition was found to be the dominant type of density effect. Moreover, a web of inter-species interactions was identified to facilitate the bait-taking of superior competitors at the expense of inferior ones. The findings of this study are relevant to fishery managers in updating current data collection protocols to alleviate data issues caused by bycatch loss, to conservation biologists in quantifying bycatch risks for susceptible seabird populations, and in aiding the design and evaluation of bycatch mitigation measures.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

Reference50 articles.

1. Relationships of pelagic seabirds with the Southern Ocean environment assessed by correspondence analysis;Abrams;The Auk,1986

2. Global seabird bycatch in longline fisheries;Anderson;Endangered Species Research,2011

3. Remote electronic monitoring as a potential alternative to on-board observers in small-scale fisheries;Bartholomew;Biological Conservation,2018

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