Entanglement and collisions of albatrosses and petrels in Argentinean side-haul trawlers

 Argentinian Side Trawler Leo Tamini 2

An Argentinean side-haul trawler with attending albatrosses around the net

Leo Tamini (Albatross Task Force Argentina, Programa Marino, Aves Argentinas, Buenos Aires, Argentina) and colleagues have published in the journal Bird Conservation International on the incidental capture of albatrosses, petrels and shearwaters by Argentinean side-haul trawlers.

Great Shearwater Argentinian Side Trawler entangled Leo Tamini

An entangled Great Shearwater within the trawl net

The paper’s summary follows:

“Between April 2008 and July 2015, we conducted a total of 18 trips on five different side-haul trawlers fishing within the Argentine Exclusive Economic Zone, monitoring 486 hauls. We observed 100% of the hauls and monitored trawl cables for 136.7 hours, about 5% of the trawl effort, to identify the levels of seabird bycatch from net entanglements and collisions with trawl cables. A total of 35 net entanglements of White-chinned Petrels Procellaria aequinoctialis, Great Shearwaters Ardenna gravis, Black-browed Albatrosses Thalassarche melanophris and Southern Royal Albatross Diomedea epomophora were recorded, all of which occurred during the autumn and winter. Additionally, 656 seabird collisions against trawl cables were recorded including 39 heavy, 96 medium and 521 light. Further, we recorded nine Black-browed Albatrosses and two Great Shearwaters potentially dead. Although in the study fishery the number of deaths in the trawl cables could surpass the number of birds incidentally killed in nets, the mortality rate caused by the latter type of interaction far exceeds those observed in nets from other trawl fisheries operating in the Patagonian Shelf. Fortunately, 26% of the seabirds entangled in the net were recovered and released alive, which indicates that awareness and training in safe bird handling and release may improve captured seabird survival rates. The main objectives of this work is to highlight a little-studied source of seabird mortality by entanglement, to generate discussion on potential technical mitigation measures for side-haul trawl fisheries, and to propose crew training in safe handling and release of seabirds as an immediate mitigation measure.”

 Southern Royal Albatross at trawl net Leo Tamini Aves Argentinas

A Southern Royal Albatross approaches an Argentinian trawl net

Photographs by Leo Tamini

With thanks to Leo Tamini for information and photographs.

Reference:

Tamini, L.L., Chavez, L.N., Dellacasa ,R.F., Crawford, R. & Frere, E.  2020.  Incidental capture of seabirds in Argentinean side-haul trawlers.  Bird Conservation International doi.org/10.1017/S095927092000062.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 16 December 2020

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.

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