Javascript must be enabled to continue!
A meta-analysis of operational interactions between pinnipeds and fisheries
View through CrossRef
AbstractThe global recovery of pinniped populations is a conservation success. However, pinniped population recovery has increased human-wildlife conflict with fisheries, an issue often reported and requiring management, but one that lacks global synthesis. We conduct a meta-analysis to estimate the impacts of operational interactions (specifically, lost catch) between pinnipeds and fisheries. Where quantifiable interactions are reported (n = 36), on average fishers have a 33.7% chance of interacting with pinnipeds on any given fishing day, and 13.8% lost catch. We find a large degree of heterogeneity between studies, with some fisheries experiencing much more negative interactions than others. Specifically, smaller-scale fisheries using nets are up to twice as likely to have negative interactions and lose up to five times more catch compared to large-scale fisheries. We conclude that pinniped-fishery conflict is a substantial global issue, but its impacts are not uniform. To successfully manage long-term coexistence between pinnipeds and humans, explicit data quantifying operational interactions is required. Population recoveries can have unintended consequences for fisheries, and management of ecological, social and economic outcomes is needed for long-term coexistence.TeaserPinniped population recoveries have led to significant impacts on fisheries, but small-scale fisheries lose out most.
Title: A meta-analysis of operational interactions between pinnipeds and fisheries
Description:
AbstractThe global recovery of pinniped populations is a conservation success.
However, pinniped population recovery has increased human-wildlife conflict with fisheries, an issue often reported and requiring management, but one that lacks global synthesis.
We conduct a meta-analysis to estimate the impacts of operational interactions (specifically, lost catch) between pinnipeds and fisheries.
Where quantifiable interactions are reported (n = 36), on average fishers have a 33.
7% chance of interacting with pinnipeds on any given fishing day, and 13.
8% lost catch.
We find a large degree of heterogeneity between studies, with some fisheries experiencing much more negative interactions than others.
Specifically, smaller-scale fisheries using nets are up to twice as likely to have negative interactions and lose up to five times more catch compared to large-scale fisheries.
We conclude that pinniped-fishery conflict is a substantial global issue, but its impacts are not uniform.
To successfully manage long-term coexistence between pinnipeds and humans, explicit data quantifying operational interactions is required.
Population recoveries can have unintended consequences for fisheries, and management of ecological, social and economic outcomes is needed for long-term coexistence.
TeaserPinniped population recoveries have led to significant impacts on fisheries, but small-scale fisheries lose out most.
Related Results
From managing fish to managing people: requirements for effective fisheries governance and management in Europe
From managing fish to managing people: requirements for effective fisheries governance and management in Europe
Despite the increasingly successful implementation of stock management under the EU Common Fisheries Policy, managing fisheries in a sustainable, integrated, and coordinated way re...
Fisheries Science and Its Environmental Consequences
Fisheries Science and Its Environmental Consequences
Fisheries science emerged in the mid-19th century, when scientists volunteered to conduct conservation-related investigations of commercially important aquatic species for the gove...
Common Fisheries Policy and its impact on the fisheries sector in Croatia
Common Fisheries Policy and its impact on the fisheries sector in Croatia
AbstractThe aim of the paper is: 1) to determine the key changes in the evolution process of the EU Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) and the Croatia’s fisheries policy and 2) to descr...
Meta-Representations as Representations of Processes
Meta-Representations as Representations of Processes
In this study, we explore how the notion of meta-representations in Higher-Order Theories (HOT) of consciousness can be implemented in computational models. HOT suggests that consc...
Fisheries‐induced Evolution
Fisheries‐induced Evolution
AbstractModern fisheries have drastically changed the level and size dependence of mortality faced by fish populations: commercial fishing usually targets medium‐sized and large in...
Bill Watkins and pinniped bioacoustics
Bill Watkins and pinniped bioacoustics
Bill’s work on pinnipeds began with a 1963 paper by Schevill, Watkins, and myself in Science on the underwater sounds of pinnipeds, which resulted from his recordings in the highly...
Fossil brains provide evidence of underwater feeding in early seals
Fossil brains provide evidence of underwater feeding in early seals
AbstractPinnipeds (seals and related species) use their whiskers to explore their environment and locate their prey. Today they live mostly in marine habitats and are adapted for a...
Operational Art
Operational Art
The art of warfare is practiced in three levels: the strategic, operational, and tactical. Operational art refers to the military commander’s employment of force in a theater of op...

