BirdLife International Marine Programme, The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds Scotland, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of St Andrews, School of Biology, Scottish Oceans Institute, St Andrews, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2022 Apr 28;17(4):e0267169. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0267169. eCollection 2022.
Bycatch of birds in longline fisheries is a global conservation issue, with between 160,000-320,000 seabirds killed each year, primarily through being caught and drowned as they attempt to snatch baits off hooks as they are set. This conservation issue has received significant recognition in southern hemisphere longline fisheries over the past several decades, largely due to the impact on highly charismatic and highly threatened birds, notably Albatrosses. As a result, the use of effective mitigation measures has been subject to fisheries regulations to reduce seabird bycatch from longliners in a number of national jurisdictions and in several Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RMFOs). While mitigation measures have been mandated in a number of north Pacific longline fisheries, this is largely not the case in north Atlantic longline fisheries. This includes vessels using floated-demersal longlines in the North-East Atlantic longline fishery targeting European Hake Merluccius merluccius, in which high levels of seabird bycatch are estimated. In this paper, we analysed the sinking speed of a floated-demersal longline used to target European Hake in the offshore waters of Scotland, to determine potential bycatch risks to seabirds. We deployed Time Depth Recorder devices at different points of the gear. We assessed how this gear performed in comparison to the best practice minimum sink rate of 0.3 m/s recommended by the Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels (ACAP) to limit bird access to baited hooks. We found that the average sinking speed of the floated-demersal longline was substantially slower than the ACAP recommendation, between two and nine times slower in non-weighted parts of the gear down to 10m water depth. Our work also found that the sink rate is particularly slow in the top 2m of the water column, increasing with depth and stabilizing at depths over 10m, presumably a consequence of propeller wash behind the vessel. We calculated that the distance astern of the vessel for hooks to sink beyond susceptible seabirds' reach largely exceeds optimum coverage of best practice design Bird Scaring Lines (100 m). Our results indicate that hooks from floated-demersal longlines are therefore readily open to seabird attacks, and as a result, present a clear bycatch risk. Research is needed to adapt existing mitigation measures to floated-longlines and to develop novel mitigation approaches to improve the sink rate of the gear without impacting target fish catch.
延绳钓渔业中的鸟类副渔获物是一个全球性的保护问题,每年有 16 万至 32 万只海鸟因此死亡,主要是因为它们在试图抢夺钩子上的诱饵时被钩住并淹死。在过去几十年里,南半球的延绳钓渔业已经认识到了这个保护问题,这主要是因为高度迷人且受到高度威胁的鸟类(尤其是信天翁)受到了影响。因此,为了减少延绳钓渔船的海鸟副渔获物,一些国家的渔业法规已经要求使用有效的缓解措施,并且在一些区域渔业管理组织(RFMO)中也是如此。虽然在一些北太平洋延绳渔业中已经规定了缓解措施,但在北大西洋延绳渔业中,这种情况在很大程度上并不存在。这包括在东北大西洋延绳渔业中使用漂浮底层延绳钓捕捞欧洲无须鳕 Merluccius merluccius 的船只,据估计,这些船只的海鸟副渔获物水平很高。在本文中,我们分析了用于苏格兰外海捕捞欧洲无须鳕的漂浮底层延绳钓的下沉速度,以确定对海鸟的潜在副渔获风险。我们在渔具的不同点部署了时间深度记录仪设备。我们评估了该渔具与保护信天翁和海燕协定(ACAP)建议的最佳实践最小下沉速度 0.3 m/s 的性能比较,以限制鸟类接触诱饵鱼钩。我们发现,漂浮底层延绳钓的平均下沉速度明显慢于 ACAP 的建议,在非加重部分的下沉速度慢了两到九倍,在 10 米水深以下。我们的工作还发现,在水柱的顶部 2 米处,下沉速度特别慢,随着深度的增加而增加,并在超过 10 米的深度稳定下来,这可能是船尾螺旋桨搅动造成的。我们计算得出,鱼钩在船尾后面下沉到易受海鸟攻击的距离远远超过最佳实践设计的驱鸟线(100 米)的最佳覆盖范围。我们的研究结果表明,漂浮底层延绳钓的鱼钩很容易受到海鸟的攻击,因此存在明显的副渔获风险。需要研究如何将现有的缓解措施应用于漂浮延绳钓,并开发新的缓解措施,在不影响目标鱼类捕捞量的情况下提高渔具的下沉速度。