New publication available:

Baird, R.W., D.B. Anderson, M.A. Kratofil, and D.L. Webster. 2021. Bringing the 
right fishermen to the table: indices of overlap between endangered false 
killer whales and nearshore fisheries in Hawai‘i. Biological Conservation 255. 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2021.108975.

PDF available at https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1cXJ91R~eL7TK

Abstract

Incidental bycatch in fisheries is a pressing conservation issue for marine 
mammal populations across the globe. However, the ability to detect and 
therefore mitigate this issue is challenging for several reasons. Fishermen are 
unlikely to voluntarily report bycatch due to fear of penalization or apathy 
towards it. While fisheries observer programs are sometimes in place to record 
bycatch, many fisheries have no observers. In Hawaiian waters there are no 
observer programs in nearshore fisheries, yet interactions with fisheries are 
likely the greatest threat to the endangered main Hawaiian Islands insular 
population of false killer whales (Pseudorca crassidens). We assess 
spatiotemporal overlap between false killer whales and nearshore fisheries in 
Hawai‘i to identify fisheries and regions where interactions are most likely to 
occur. Interactions with fisheries was cited as the greatest threat to this 
population’s viability as a result of growing evidence over recent decades. We 
used false killer whale location data from 38 satellite tag deployments 
(2007-2018) and commercial fishery catch logs from a corresponding period to 
develop fishery overlap indices (FOIs) from a perspective that should reflect 
the experience of local fishermen. The area off Kona has the highest levels of 
fishing effort, but a low FOI, while high FOI values (up to several thousand 
times higher than Kona) were found off O‘ahu, Moloka‘i, Maui, Lāna‘i and the 
north end of Hawai‘i. Our findings provide direction for where efforts should 
be focused to effectively monitor and mitigate bycatch for this endangered 
population of false killer whales.

For additional publications on our Hawai‘i research check out 
https://www.cascadiaresearch.org/hawaiian-cetacean-studies/publications

Robin




=================================================================
Robin W. Baird, Ph.D.
Research Biologist, Cascadia Research Collective
Affiliate Faculty, Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology
Mailing address:
Cascadia Research Collective
218 1/2 W. 4th Avenue
Olympia, WA 98501 USA
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Updates on our December 2020 Maui Nui 
project<https://www.cascadiaresearch.org/hawaiian-cetacean-studies/December2020>
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