Dear MARMAM community

On behalf of my coauthors, I have the pleasure to share that the following 
article has been published yesterday: 

Kiszka, J., Moazzam, M., Boussarie, G., Shahid, U., Babar, K. and Nawaz, R., 
2021. Setting the net lower: a potential low-cost mitigation method to reduce 
cetacean bycatch in drift gillnet fisheries. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and 
Freshwater Ecosystems.


Abstract: 
Bycatch is the most significant threat to marine megafauna (sea turtles, marine 
mammals, elasmobranchs, seabirds) worldwide, and the leading cause of the 
decline of several cetacean species. The bycatch issue in the Indian Ocean is 
poorly understood, but high bycatch levels in gillnet fisheries have been 
documented for the past two decades, in both small-scale and semi-industrial 
fisheries. Unfortunately, methods to reduce bycatch are often unavailable, 
financially non-viable or socially unacceptable to fishermen.
Using a network of trained boat captains in the tuna drift gillnet fishery in 
the Arabian Sea, targeted catch and bycatch data were collected from 2013 to 
2017 off the coast of Pakistan (northern Indian Ocean). Two fishing methods 
using multifilament gillnets were used: surface deployment and subsurface 
deployment (i.e. headline of net set below 2 m depth).
Predicted catch rates for targeted species did not differ significantly between 
the two fishing practices, although a drop in tuna (6.2%) and tuna-like (10.9%) 
species captures was recorded in subsurface sets. The probability of cetacean 
bycatch, however, was 78.5% lower in subsurface than in surface sets.
Cetacean bycatch in tuna drift gillnet fisheries has the potential to be 
significantly reduced at a relatively low cost for fishers. However, further 
research with an appropriate sampling design and a large sample size is 
required to confirm the efficacy of the proposed mitigation method. The 
acceptability and adoption of subsurface setting by fishers also needs to be 
further investigated. Despite some limitations, this preliminary study also 
highlights the importance of crew-based observer data as an alternative source 
of data when observers cannot be deployed on fishing vessels.
Here is the link to the paper: 
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aqc.3706 
<https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aqc.3706> Please contact me 
(jeremy.kis...@gmail.com <mailto:jeremy.kis...@gmail.com>) if you have any 
questions. 

Best,

Jeremy


Jeremy Kiszka (PhD)
Assistant Professor
Marine Conservation Ecology lab
https://marineconservationecologylab.com 
Department of Biological Sciences
Coastlines and Oceans Division
Institute of Environment
Florida International University

24th Conference on the Biology of Marine Mammals, Co-Chair
https://www.smmconference.org 




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