Dear MARMAMers,

We are pleased to share our new OA research paper in Aquatic Conservation, 
where we estimate the annual marine megafauna catch (marine mammals, sea 
turtles, and elasmobranchs) in Thailand's small-scale fisheries.

Svarachorn T, Temple AJ & Berggren P (2023). Marine megafauna catch in Thai 
small-scale fisheries. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, 
1-18. https://doi.org/10.1002/aqc.3989

Abstract:
1. Small-scale fisheries are a global conservation threat to marine megafauna 
(marine mammals, sea turtles, and elasmobranchs). There is currently limited 
information about marine megafauna catch in Thailand's small-scale fisheries, 
which is required for effective management.
2. This study represents the first independent catch assessment of marine 
megafauna in Thai small-scale fisheries. Data on catch and fisheries effort 
across 1 year (2016-2017) were collected from questionnaire interviews with 535 
fishers in 17 provinces along the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea coasts. 
Catch per unit effort was calculated for marine megafauna by fishing gear types 
and extrapolated to estimate annual catches using Thai official fisheries 
statistics.
3. The annual estimated catches were 5.66 million (95% confidence interval, CI: 
4.10-7.82 million) rays, 457,864 (95% CI: 192,352-969,166) sharks, 2,400 (95% 
CI: 1610-3,537) sea turtles, 790 (95% CI: 519-1,167) small cetaceans, and 72 
(95% CI: 19-194) dugongs in Thai small-scale fisheries.
4. Gillnets had the highest catch per unit effort for all megafauna groups in 
both sea areas except for sea turtles, where pound nets had the highest catch 
per unit effort in the Gulf of Thailand. Further, among gillnets, crab gillnets 
had the highest catch per unit effort for all groups except dugongs, where ray 
gillnets had the highest catch per unit effort. Accounting for effort, crab 
gillnets and shrimp trammel nets were responsible for most of the megafauna 
catch, where crab gillnets contributed 72%-95% of the annual estimated marine 
megafauna catch. Crab gillnets and shrimp trammel nets were used by 46% and 40% 
respectively of the interviewed fishers and by 27% and 15% respectively of all 
small-scale fishers operating in Thai waters.
5. Restrictions for gillnet fishing effort (crab gillnets specifically) are 
needed to prevent extirpation of threatened megafauna species that are 
important for ecosystem resilience and productivity.

Open access paper available at: https://doi.org/10.1002/aqc.3989

Cheers,

Per
_______________________________________________________________
Per Berggren
Professor of Marine Megafauna Conservation,
School of Natural & Environmental Sciences
5.90 Ridley Building 2, Newcastle University, NE1 7RU, UK
Tel +44 191 2085676, Email: 
per.bergg...@ncl.ac.uk<mailto:per.bergg...@ncl.ac.uk>
https://www.ncl.ac.uk/nes/our-research/marine/
https://twitter.com/perberggren1
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Latest papers:
Marine megafauna catch in Thai small-scale fisheries
https://doi.org/10.1002/aqc.3989

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