Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University, Pacific Grove, CA, USA.
Global Fishing Watch, Washington, DC, USA.
Sci Adv. 2019 Mar 13;5(3):eaau3761. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aau3761. eCollection 2019 Mar.
Many species of sharks and some tunas are threatened by overexploitation, yet the degree of overlap between industrial fisheries and pelagic fishes remains poorly understood. Using satellite tracks from 933 industrial fishing vessels and predictive habitat models from 876 electronic tags deployed on seven shark and tuna species, we developed fishing effort maps across the northeast Pacific Ocean and assessed overlap with core habitats of pelagic fishes. Up to 35% of species' core habitats overlapped with fishing effort. We identified overlap hotspots along the North American shelf, the equatorial Pacific, and the subtropical gyre. Results indicate where species require international conservation efforts and effective management within national waters. Only five national fleets (Mexico, Taiwan, China, Japan, and the United States) account for >90% of overlap with core habitats of our focal sharks and tunas on the high seas. These results inform global negotiations to achieve sustainability on the high seas.
许多鲨鱼物种和一些金枪鱼都受到过度捕捞的威胁,但工业渔业和远洋鱼类之间的重叠程度仍知之甚少。利用来自 933 艘工业渔船的卫星轨迹和在 7 种鲨鱼和金枪鱼物种上部署的 876 个电子标签的预测栖息地模型,我们在东北太平洋开发了渔业努力地图,并评估了与远洋鱼类核心栖息地的重叠情况。多达 35%的物种核心栖息地与捕捞努力重叠。我们在北美的大陆架、赤道太平洋和亚热带环流中确定了重叠热点。结果表明了物种需要国际保护努力以及在国家水域内进行有效管理的地方。只有五个国家的船队(墨西哥、中国台湾、中国、日本和美国)在公海上与我们关注的鲨鱼和金枪鱼的核心栖息地重叠超过 90%。这些结果为实现公海可持续性的全球谈判提供了信息。