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Significant reductions in mortality of threatened seabirds in a South African trawl fishery

Globally, many thousands of seabirds are killed accidentally in demersal trawl fisheries through cable interactions and net entanglements. However, multi‐year datasets for estimating seabird–trawl interactions robustly are scarce. In 2004/2005, an estimated 15 500 (7000–26 000) seabirds were killed...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Animal conservation 2014-12, Vol.17 (6), p.520-529
Main Authors: Maree, B. A., Wanless, R. M., Fairweather, T. P., Sullivan, B. J., Yates, O.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Globally, many thousands of seabirds are killed accidentally in demersal trawl fisheries through cable interactions and net entanglements. However, multi‐year datasets for estimating seabird–trawl interactions robustly are scarce. In 2004/2005, an estimated 15 500 (7000–26 000) seabirds were killed annually through cable strikes in the South African deep‐water hake trawl fishery; the majority were albatrosses. We reanalysed those data using fishing effort from vessel logbooks (previously unavailable). The new estimates are ∼40% lower across all taxa: ∼9300 birds in 2004, of which ∼7200 were albatrosses. We compare these figures to data from 2006 to 2010, when vessels used a single measure (bird‐scaring lines) to reduce seabird mortality. From 64 trips and 690 hours of observation, 41 seabirds were confirmed killed due to cable strikes, of which 22% were albatrosses. Fatal cable interactions occurred overwhelmingly when vessels discarded offal, with the highest rates (birds killed per hour of observation) in winter and during setting. Comparing rates shows that bird‐scaring lines alone resulted in 73–95% lower mortality in the winter/discard strata (all seabirds: 0.56 birds per hour before, 0.15 birds per hour after, P  90%) and annual fishing effort reduced by 50% from 2004–2005 to 2010. Bird‐scaring lines cost
ISSN:1367-9430
1469-1795
DOI:10.1111/acv.12126