Dear Colleagues,

On behalf of Dr. Maritza Sepulveda and our colleagues, we are excited to share 
the latest paper from our Lenfest Oceans project on using the bycatch risk 
assessment (ByRA) toolbox for Chilean fisheries  
(https://www.lenfestocean.org/en/research-projects/marine-mammal-bycatch-risk-assessment-in-chile).

Bycatch risk assessment for South American sea lions using a GIS-based toolbox
Abstract
Bycatch of marine mammals in fisheries is a critical conservation issue 
worldwide, and Chile is no exception. Pinnipeds such as the South American sea 
lion (Otaria byronia, SASL) frequently encounter fishing gear along the Chilean 
coast. Despite widespread evidence of these interactions, few studies have 
spatially assessed SASL bycatch risk across multiple fisheries for this 
species. This study applies the Bycatch Risk Assessment (ByRA) toolbox, a 
GIS-based model, to evaluate and compare the risk of SASL bycatch across nine 
Chilean purse-seine and trawl gear fisheries based on data from on-board 
scientific observer logs from 2015 to 2019. Our findings identify trawl 
fisheries, particularly those targeting southern hake (Merluccius australis), 
as posing the highest bycatch risk, especially during the non- reproductive 
season when SASL exhibit broader spatial distribution. Purse-seine fisheries 
presented lower risk overall, with the industrial northern fleet showing the 
highest relative risk. Spatial patterns revealed that risk is concentrated in 
nearshore areas, where the overlap between the distribution of SASL and fishing 
activity is the greatest. These results provide a robust, spatially explicit 
foundation for prioritizing mitigation measures, including the mandatory use of 
exclusion devices and seasonal restrictions. Our approach underscores the 
potential mitigation provided by evidence-based management of marine mammal 
bycatch in Chile and contributes information toward the assessment of 
compliance with domestic and international regulations.

Please use the following link to access the article in Biological Conservation:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006320726001217?dgcid=coauthor

Please let us know any questions about this project or the ByRA toolbox,

Ellen Hines, PhD
Estuary & Ocean Science Center
Professor Emeritus, School of the Environment

San Francisco State University
3150 Paradise Dr
Tiburon, CA. 94940
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

https://eoscenter.sfsu.edu/ellen-hines



Adjunct Scientist: Center for Coastal Studies, Provincetown, MA


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