School of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of Arizona, 1064 East Lowell Street, Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA.
Tribhuvan University, Institute of Forestry, Post Box:43, Pokhara, Nepal.
Sci Rep. 2020 Nov 2;10(1):18798. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-75997-4.
Here we quantify the effects of artisanal fisheries on the ecology of a small cetacean, the Ganges River dolphin (Platanista gangetica gangetica, GRD), in a large river system of Nepal. We examine the size-classes of fisheries' catches, behavioural changes in GRD in response to fishing activities, and diel overlap between GRD and fishing activity. We observed high human exploitation rates (> 60% of the total catch per effort) of GRD-preferred prey sizes, indicating risks of high resource competition and dietary overlap, especially during the low water season when resource availability is reduced. Competitive interactions in the feeding niches during the low water season, plus temporal overlap between the peak exploitation and critical life-history events (e.g., reproduction), likely have ecological consequences. Furthermore, we detected 48% (95% CI 43-52%) increase in the chance of behavioural changes among dolphins exposed to anthropopressure (fishing activity), risking social behaviour impairment in exposed dolphins. The higher diel overlap and increased diel coefficient as the surveys progressed towards the monsoon season suggest temporal shifts in GRD socio-behavioural states and seasonal effects on resource partitioning, respectively. This work identifies drivers of small cetaceans-fisheries interactions and their consequences, and can be used to help reduce biologically significant fishing impacts on small cetaceans. Mitigation strategies, together with river sanctuary and distanced-based approaches, should be urgently included in a framework of ecosystem-based management.
在这里,我们量化了手工艺渔业对尼泊尔大河流系统中小型鲸类——恒河豚(Platanista gangetica gangetica,GRD)的生态影响。我们研究了渔业捕捞的大小类别、GRD 对捕捞活动的行为变化,以及 GRD 和捕捞活动之间的昼夜重叠。我们观察到 GRD 偏好的猎物大小的人类捕捞率很高(每努力捕捞的总渔获量的>60%),这表明存在高资源竞争和饮食重叠的风险,尤其是在水资源减少的低水季节。低水季节在觅食生态位的竞争相互作用,加上高峰捕捞和关键生命史事件(例如繁殖)之间的时间重叠,可能会产生生态后果。此外,我们发现,在受到人为压力(捕捞活动)影响的海豚中,行为变化的几率增加了 48%(95%置信区间 43-52%),这可能会导致暴露海豚的社会行为受损。随着调查向季风季节推进,昼夜重叠和昼夜系数增加,分别表明 GRD 社会行为状态的时间变化和资源分配的季节性影响。这项工作确定了小型鲸类与渔业相互作用的驱动因素及其后果,并可用于帮助减少对小型鲸类具有重要生物学意义的捕捞影响。缓解策略,以及河流保护区和基于距离的方法,应紧急纳入基于生态系统的管理框架中。