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Reducing seabird bycatch in the Hawaii longline tuna fishery
Citation
Gilman, EL and Kobayashi, D and Chaloupka, M, Reducing seabird bycatch in the Hawaii longline tuna fishery, Endangered Species Research, 5, (2-3) pp. 309-323. ISSN 1613-4796 (2008) [Refereed Article]
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Official URL: http://www.int-res.com
DOI: doi:10.3354/esr00133
Abstract
Mortality in longline fisheries represents a global threat to some species of pelagic
seabirds. Regulations were adopted in 2001 to reduce seabird bycatch in the Hawaii longline tuna
fishery. We used a Poisson generalized additive regression modeling approach to evaluate the
change in seabird bycatch rates from the pre- to post-regulation period, and to evaluate the efficacy
of alternative combinations of seabird bycatch reduction methods employed during the post-regulation
period. Informative covariates of temporal and geo-referenced spatial effects of fishing effort and
sampling variation commonly found with count data were included in the model to provide a better
inference of the effect of employing required changes in fishing gear and methods. We found a significant
67% (95% CI: 62 to 72) reduction in the seabird bycatch rate following the introduction of
regulations. Post-regulation, sets employing 4 different combinations of seabird avoidance methods
all resulted in significant reductions to the pre-regulation seabird catch rate. Employing side-setting
and 60 g weights was the only combination with no seabird captures during the post-regulation
period. Using heavier branch line weights and treated bait (thawed and dyed blue) both significantly
reduced seabird catch rates. Temporal and spatial distribution of fishing effort and the timing of initiating
setting were also significant factors affecting seabird bycatch rates: time-area closures and
restricting the timing of setting could further reduce seabird bycatch. A substantial proportion of
seabird captures occurred south of the area where mitigation measures are required: moving the
southern boundary farther south would further reduce seabird catches.
Item Details
Item Type: | Refereed Article |
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Keywords: | Albatross; Bycatch; Fisheries; Longline; Mitigation; Seabird |
Research Division: | Environmental Sciences |
Research Group: | Environmental management |
Research Field: | Wildlife and habitat management |
Objective Division: | Environmental Management |
Objective Group: | Marine systems and management |
Objective Field: | Marine biodiversity |
UTAS Author: | Gilman, EL (Dr Eric Gilman) |
ID Code: | 55353 |
Year Published: | 2008 |
Deposited By: | Geography and Environmental Studies |
Deposited On: | 2009-03-09 |
Last Modified: | 2009-05-06 |
Downloads: | 877 View Download Statistics |
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