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Millions of turtles killed due to commercial fishing | Commercial fishing is estimated to have killed millions of sea turtles, a new research has revealed. The study has appeared online April 6 in the journal Conservation Letters. The researchers examined data compiled
from peer-reviewed papers, government reports, technical reports, and symposia
proceedings published between 1990 and 2008 to come up with the findings. All
data were based on direct onboard observations or interviews with fishermen. The
study did not include data from recreational fishing. Six of the world's seven
species of sea turtles are currently listed as vulnerable, endangered or critically
endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Bryan Wallace, lead author
of the new paper, said: "Direct onboard observations and interviews with fishermen
indicate that about 85,000 turtles were caught between 1990 and 2008. But because
these reports cover less than one percent of all fleets, with little or no information
from small-scale fisheries around the world, we conservatively estimate that the
true total is at least two orders of magnitude higher." Wallace is the science
advisor for the Sea Turtle Flagship Program at Conservation International and
an adjunct assistant professor at Duke University's Nicholas School of the Environment.
Most of his co-authors are researchers at Duke's Center for Marine Conservation.
Their global data review revealed that the highest reported bycatch rates for
longline fisheries occurred off Mexico's Baja California peninsula, the highest
rates for gillnet fishing took place in the North Adriatic region of the Mediterranean
and the highest rates for trawls occurred off the coast of Uruguay. When bycatch
rates and amounts of observed fishing activity for all three gear types were combined
and ranked across regions, four regions emerged as the overall most urgent conservation
priorities: the East Pacific, the Mediterranean, the Southwest Atlantic, and the
Northwest Atlantic. Wallace said: "Although our numbers are estimates, they highlight
clearly the importance of guidelines for fishing equipment and practices to help
reduce these losses. Effective measures to reduce turtle bycatch include the use
of circle hooks and fish bait in longline fisheries, and Turtle Excluder Devices
(TEDs) in trawling. Many of the most effective types of gear modifications have
been developed by fishermen themselves, Wallace pointed out. According to Wallace,
the Hawaiian longline fishery and the Australian prawn fishery have significantly
reduced bycatch through close working relationships between fishermen and government
managers, use of onboard observers, mandatory gear modifications and innovative
technologies. TurtleWatch, a real-time database that provides daily updates on
water temperatures and other conditions indicating where turtles might be found,
has guided fishermen to avoid setting their gear in those areas. Other approaches,
such as the creation of marine protected areas and use of catch shares, also reduce
bycatch, preserve marine biodiversity and promote healthy fish stocks in some
cases, he observed. Wallace said: "Fisheries bycatch is the most acute threat
to worldwide sea turtle populations today. Many animals die or are injured as
a result of these interactions. "But our message is that it's not a lost cause.
Managers and fishers have tools they can use to reduce bycatch, preserve marine
biodiversity and promote healthy fish stocks, so that everyone wins, including
turtles." The study stems from work Wallace began in 2005 as a postdoctoral research
associate at the Duke University Marine Lab, where he helped develop the first
global bycatch database for longline fisheries. |
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