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Displaying 501 - 510 of 568
Location Gear Catch Technique Bycatch species Type Results

Welsh waters (Cardigan Bay, Anglesey) and Scottish waters (Moray Firth)

UK king scallop (Pecten maximus)
Modified ground gear (mobile)
Skates/Rays, Invertebrates Field study in the wild
Summary:

This study tests the impact of skids placed on scallop dredges in various habitats to reduce seabed impact; skids raise the scallop collecting bag 10-11cm off the seabed. The modified skid dredge caught more marketable scallops per unit area, but also retained more bycatch overall and more undersize scallops. Results were habitat specific.

Effect on Bycatch: increased bycatch
Reference:
Fenton, M., Szostek, C.L., Delargy, A., Johnson, A.F., Kaiser, M.J., Hinz, H., Hold, N., Sciberras, M. , 2024 , Catch yield and selectivity of a modified scallop dredge to reduce seabed impact

Summary study
Summary:

This study analyzes the impacts of annual temporal fishing closures of gillnet fisheries in Lake Saimaa, Finland on bycatch/recovery of the Saimaa ringed seal population from 1991-2021. Results show that  fishing was responsible for 26% of observed mortality and 90% of that was from gillnet entanglement, but most bycatch mortalities are likely not observed and therefore underestimated. Longer temporal coverage of annual closures would improve juvenile survival, but the coverage may be regionally adequate. 

Reference:
Jounela, P., Auttila, M., Alakoski, R., Niemi, M., Kunnasranta, M. , 2024 , Effects of fishing restrictions on the recovery of the endangered Saimaa ringed seal (Pusa hispida saimensis) population

Summary study
Summary:

In 2022, Mexican authorities placed hundreds of concrete blocks with entangling metal hooks to discourage gill net use; as a result, there has been a substantial decline in gill net use in the area, and healthy vaquitas have been observed. However, in order to fully protect the vaquita from extinction, more of the population's distribution area need to be protected from gill nets.

Reference:
Rojas-Bracho, L., Taylor, B.L., Reeves, R.R., Read, A., Barlow, J., Donovan, D., Thomas, P.O., Gulland, F., Mesnick, S.L., Brownwell Jr., R. L., Henry, A., Urban, J., Gerrodette, T., , 2025 , https://camposmarteld.wixsite.com/thelastgreatfrontier/our-research

Summary study
Summary:

This summary study provides the  first global meta-analyses  of small- and large-scale gillnet odontocete bycatch  during 1990–2020, and estimates that annual gillnet bycatch in this timespan is 50,000 odontocetes. It highlights the need for improved management of gillnet fisheries worldwide, noting that effective methods (spatial closures, deterrent devices, gear modifications, etc.) will vary depending on region and species, such as using acoustic deterrents in river ecosystems or electric barriers in the open ocean. 

Reference:
Sonne, C., Lam, S.S., Foong, S.Y., Mahari, W.A.W., Ma, N.L., Bank, M.S. , 2024 , A global meta-analysis of gillnet bycatch of toothed whales: Mitigation measures and research gaps

Sub-surface sets (gillnets)
Small Cetaceans (maximum length < 7.5 meters) Summary study
Summary:

In the Indian Ocean tuna gillnet fisheries, cetacean bycatch is very high, but it is understudied and poorly understood. This paper investigates the issue and makes specific recommendations to strengthen knowledge and management: improve catch and bycatch reporting, increase research and analyses of cetaceans in the region in order to assess bycatch, revise the conservation measure adopted to address the bycatch of cetaceans in IOTC fisheries (Resolution 23/06) to include additional reporting for gillnets operating in EEZs, and expand the use of mitigation methods, such as setting gillnets 2m below the surface.

 

 

 

Reference:
Elliott, B., Kiszka, J.J., Bonhommeau, S., Shahid, U., Lent, R., Nelson, L., Read, A.J., 2024 , Bycatch in drift gillnet fisheries: A sink for Indian Ocean cetaceans

Martinique

n/a
Acoustic deterrent devices
Sea Turtles Field study in the wild
Summary:

This study recorded and analyzed vocalizations of green sea turtles off the Carribbean island of Martinique, and identified which sounds seemed to be linked to flight, fear, and social aspects. When these recordings of sea turtles were played to wild sea turtles, they demonstrated behavioral responses (vigilance and/or escape) to the sounds they produce, suggesting that acoustic deterrents may be effective to reduce sea turtle bycatch. Sea turtles did not respond to synthetic or geophonic noises.

 

Effect on Bycatch: Sea turtles responded to recordings of their vocalizations with escape and/or increased vigilance
Reference:
Chevallier, D., Maucourt, L., Charrier, I., Lelong, P., Le Gall, Y., Menut, E., Wallace, B., Delvenne, C., Vincze, O., Jeantet, L., Girondot, M., 2024 , The response of sea turtles to vocalizations opens new perspectives to reduce their bycatch

Summary study
Summary:

This article summarizes cetacean strandings along the Bulgarian coast of the Black Sea between 2010-2022; of a total 1,528 strandings, evidence of bycatch was present in 80 animals. The presence of strandings with signs of bycatch even during the seasonal bans on turbot fishing suggests that IUU fisheries may be operating.

Reference:
Popov, D., and Meshkova, G., 2024 , Cetacean Strandings along the Bulgarian Coast of the Black Sea in 2010–2022

Summary study
Summary:

 This study assesses bycatch and depredation  by sharksand odontocetes in the French Polynesian longline fishery between 2000 and 2018, and finds that less than 2% of the catch had been depredated, but shark bycatch was high (20,000 sharks annually, 0.5 shark every 1000 hooks). Conversely, odontocete bycatch was comparatively low  (13 occurrences in 18 years), though reporting may have been inaccurate. This is important as there is a plan to  double offshore fisheries production in the French Polynesia EEZ by 2027.

Reference:
Biquet, J.A., Tixier, P., Richard, G., Soehnlen, M., Thellier, T., Carzon, P., Clua, E., Guinet, G. , 2024 , Toothed whale and shark depredation and bycatch in the longline fishery of French Polynesia

Summary study
Summary:

This is a meta-analysis that quantified the effects of 42 technical measures on the target catch and the bycatch of seabirds, elasmobranchs, marine mammals and sea turtles, evaluating which methods were most effective at mitigating bycatch of each fauna group. Overall, mitigation methods reduced bycatch while having no statistically significant effect on the target catch, and sensory-based measures (e.g. pingers, blue-dyed bait) generally outperformed physical-based measures (e.g. circle hook, larger mesh) in reducing  bycatch.

Reference:
Huang, C., Rice, J., Richter, A., Zhou, K., Wang, Y., Wei, C., Pagani-Núñez, E., Maleko, P.N., Zhang, X., Lee, T.M., Liu, Y., 2024 , Effects of fishery bycatch-mitigation measures on vulnerable marine fauna and target catch

Summary study
Summary:

This study analyzed Chinese pelagic tuna longline observer data from 2010 to 2018 to determine catch composition of Atlantic targeting bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus) and bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus), as well as the status and discard rate common bycatch species. A total of 55 species were observed as bycatch, and the most common was shark species. The catch composition of the bigeye tuna fishery varies significantly from that of bluefin tuna. 

Reference:
Pan, B., Zhu, J., Lin, Q., Geng, Z., Wu, F., Zhang, Y.,, 2024 , Study on the catch, bycatch and discard of Chinese pelagic longline fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean

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