IIMYC   23581
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES MARINAS Y COSTERAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Exporting seabird by-catch: concentration of seabird foraging activity and fisheries interactions around closure areas
Autor/es:
SOFÍA COPELLO; GABRIELA BLANCO; JUAN PABLO SECO PON; FLAVIO QUINTANA
Reunión:
Conferencia; Segunda Conferencia Mundial de Aves Marinas; 2015
Resumen:
Fisheries are one of the main threats affecting the survival of most albatrosses and petrels species around the globe. The fishing management (e.g. fishing quotas, prohibit fishing locations, etc.) could have a strong effect on several traits of seabirds? ecology such as the foraging behavior and the interactions with the vessels. There is an extensive year-round fishing closure in the Patagonian Shelf (area of approximately 120,000 km2) where trawling is banned. The consequent concentration of trawlers? fishing effort in the boundary of this area and strong overlapping with the distribution of albatrosses triggered the question of a potential exacerbated negative effect of bycatch in such border area. Hence, this study was conducted having as main objectives: (1) the analysis of the effect of fishing closures on the flight patterns of Black-browed Albatrosses (BBAs) and Southern Giant Petrels (SGPs) as case study species known to extensively interact with trawlers, and (2) the analysis in space and time of seabird-fisheries interactions (i.e. contacts with the fishing gear as a proxy of risk of mortality) in relation to the vicinity to fishing closure. For this, 55 satellite transmitters were deployed on BBAs and SGPs between 1999 and 2013. Discrete behavioral mode (foraging vs. transiting) was inferred inside and outside the closure area from satellite movement data using state-space models. Seabird bycatch data were obtained from on-board observers. The spatial density for each behavioral mode and the seabird bycatch was determined by performing a Kernel density analysis rates. Foraging for both species was concentrated on the border of the fishing closure where the fishing activity also concentrated.  Contrarily, the presence of the fishing closure did not influenced transiting behavior. Seabird-fishery interactions were significantly concentrated in the external boundary of the fishing closure area (50% of the interactions in an area of about 70.000 km2) in comparison with other areas along the Patagonian Shelf. The study highlights that, although by definition seabird bycatch in closure areas is nil, in practice the ?exporting effect? due to the concentration of both fishing effort and seabird foraging in border areas may substantially increase seabird by-catch in the immediate neighboring waters. Hence, the design of conservation management measures for seabird by-catch should contemplate specific regulations to address these negative side effects of concentrating both fishing and seabird activity in border areas.