ACAP works with the Southern Seabird Solutions Trust and the Coalition of Legal Toothfish Operators to produce a Seabird Smart Fishing video

As an adjunct to this year's meetings of CCAMLR in Hobart, Australia, the Southern Seabird Solutions Trust (SSST) in collaboration with the Coalition of Legal Toothfish Operators Inc (COLTO) and other bodies launched its latest effort to help reduce the mortality of seabirds in both longline and trawl fisheries.

The 12-minute Seabird Smart Fishing - A Collaborative Approach video takes the viewer by way of interviews and at-sea footage through innovative techniques developed to reduce seabird bycatch in three Southern Hemisphere fisheries: the Antarctic auto-line fishery, the New Zealand deep-water trawl fleet and the Chilean industrial Patagonian Toothfish fishery.  Examples include integrated line weighting developed and tested in Australasian waters that sinks the longline and its baited hooks quickly out of the reach of ship-following albatrosses and petrels, and use of a basket technique ("cachalotera") in Chile both to reduce seabird mortality during line-setting and stop Sperm and Killer Whales taking hooked fish as the longline is hauled.

Fact_Sheet_04_Fig2
The Chilean Cachalotera system

Click here to read more about the three mitigation techniques highlighted in the video.

The video demonstrates that collaboration between the fishing industry, scientists and management agencies has resulted in the development and implementation of effective solutions to manage seabird interactions in three separate fisheries.  The Albatross and Petrel Agreement, along with a number of other governmental and non-governmental sponsors, including COLTO and CCAMLR, helped fund the production of the video, and ACAP's Executive Secretary Warren Papworth was present at its launch in Hobart earlier this month

With thanks to Janice Molloy, Convenor, Southern Seabird Solutions Trust for information

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 15 November 2012

The Agreement on the
Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels

ACAP is a multilateral agreement which seeks to conserve listed albatrosses, petrels and shearwaters by coordinating international activity to mitigate known threats to their populations.

About ACAP

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