Potential bycatch of seabirds and turtles in hook-and-line fisheries of the Itaipava Fleet, Brazil
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2007-05-28
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218
Página final
224
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The decline of populations of certain seabirds and sea turtles around the world is partly related to their incidental capture in large-scale fisheries.
However, the impacts of small-scale fisheries on endangered seabirds and sea turtles, being carried out in many places around the world, have been
largely neglected by scientists and governments. We monitored 178 fishing days and described a range of poorly known hook-and-line commercial
fisheries carried out by the Itaipava fleet, southeastern Brazil, composed by 497 vessels and deploying hooks from 18◦S to 35◦S. Seven fisheries
were defined: fast trolling for tuna and tuna-like species, slow trolling for Bigeye tuna, handlining, surface longline for Dolphinfish, pelagic
longline for Swordfish, bottom dropline, and pole-and-line with live bait. We observed bycatch of 47 seabirds of six species and 45 turtles of four
species. Capture rates were higher for the surface longline for Dolphinfish (0.15 birds/1000 hooks and 1.08 turtles/1000 hooks), slow trolling for
Bigeye tuna (0.41 birds/day) and handlining targeting Yellowfin tuna (0.61 birds/day). Endangered Spectacled petrel (Procellaria conspicillata),
Atlantic Yellow-nosed (Thalassarche chlororhynchos), and Black-browed (T. melanophris) albatrosses were the main seabirds caught. Immature
Loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) and immature or adult Leatherback turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) were the main sea turtles affected by
the surface longline for Dolphinfish. Monitoring the fleet and bycatch levels, development of mitigation measures, establishment of educational
programs, government control over the fleet, and enforcement, are urgently required for the hook-and-line fisheries described in the present study.
© 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.