Ghost Nets Haunt the Olive Ridley Turtle (Lepidochelys olivacea) near the Brazilian Islands of Fernando de Noronha and Atol das Rocas
Data
2012
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Fonte
Herpetological Review
Tipo
Página inicial
245
Página final
246
DOI
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Fernando de Noronha (3.8333°S, 32.4167°W) and Atol das
Rocas (3.8666°S, 33.8000°W) are Brazilian offshore islands that
host breeding populations of Green Turtles (Chelonia mydas)
and provide benthic foraging habitat for aggregations of Green
and Hawksbill Turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata; Marcovaldi and
Marcovaldi 1999) and occasionally Loggerheads (Caretta caretta;
Bellini and Sanches 1998). The fact that Olive Ridley Turtles (Lepidochelys
olivacea) also forage in the vicinity of these offshore
islands is evidenced by carcasses found stranded on the beach
and animals entangled in ghost nets, i.e., abandoned, lost, or
otherwise discarded fishing gear.
From 1996 to 2011, 20 Olive Ridley Turtles were recorded by
the Brazilian sea turtle conservation program (Projeto TAMARICMBio),
including 17 at Fernando de Noronha and 3 at Atol das
Rocas. Of these, 18 were entangled in ghost nets (16 still alive and
2 dead) and another two individuals were found dead, stranded
on the beach. The three turtles recorded at Atol das Rocas were
alive and entangled together in the same ghost net, as were four
turtles at Fernando de Noronha; all other entanglements were
of single individuals. All the nets consisted of multifilament nylon,
with mesh sizes of 17–22 cm (stretched mesh). The origin
of these nets is unknown, neither is it clear if the nets were used
in high seas or coastal fisheries or by national or international
ships. Indeed, neither the scale nor magnitude of fishing activity
(industrial or artisanal) in the area, or the target species, have yet
been determined. Ghost nets are a well-documented threat for
marine fauna including sea turtles (Halpern et al. 2008; Macfadyen
et al. 2009). In spite of the fact that the origin of the ghost
nets is unknown, the influence of the ocean currents seems to
be clear. Atol das Rocas and Fernando de Noronha are located
where the South Equatorial Current (SEC) flows from east to west
(Kikuchi 2000; Renner 2004) and all recorded entanglement was
east of the islands. This could indicate that ghost nets were upstream
of the location where the turtles were found.