Estimating bycatch mortality for marine mammals: concepts and best practices

Jeffrey E. Moore*, Dennis Heinemann, Tessa B. Francis, Philip S. Hammond, Kristy J. Long, André E. Punt, Randall R. Reeves, Maritza Sepúlveda, Guðjón Már Sigurðsson, Margaret C. Siple, Gísli A. Víkingsson, Paul R. Wade, Rob Williams, Alexandre N. Zerbini

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Fisheries bycatch is the greatest current source of human-caused deaths of marine mammals worldwide, with severe impacts on the health and viability of many populations. Recent regulations enacted in the United States under the Fish and Fish Product Import Provisions of its Marine Mammal Protection Act require nations with fisheries exporting fish and fish products to the United States (hereafter, “export fisheries”) to have or establish marine mammal protection standards that are comparable in effectiveness to the standards for United States commercial fisheries. In many cases, this will require estimating marine mammal bycatch in those fisheries. Bycatch estimation is conceptually straightforward but can be difficult in practice, especially if resources (funding) are limiting or for fisheries consisting of many, small vessels with geographically-dispersed landing sites. This paper describes best practices for estimating bycatch mortality, which is an important ingredient of bycatch assessment and mitigation. We discuss a general bycatch estimator and how to obtain its requisite bycatch-rate and fisheries-effort data. Scientific observer programs provide the most robust bycatch estimates and consequently are discussed at length, including characteristics such as study design, data collection, statistical analysis, and common sources of estimation bias. We also discuss alternative approaches and data types, such as those based on self-reporting and electronic vessel-monitoring systems. This guide is intended to be useful to managers and scientists in countries having or establishing programs aimed at managing marine mammal bycatch, especially those conducting first-time assessments of fisheries impacts on marine mammal populations.
Original languageEnglish
Article number752356
Number of pages15
JournalFrontiers in Marine Science
Volume8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Dec 2021

Keywords

  • Marine Science
  • Potential Biological Removal (PBR)
  • Seafood import provisions
  • Stock assessment
  • Marine mammal
  • Estimation
  • Bycatch
  • Marine Mammal Protection Act

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