TY - JOUR
T1 - Vulnerability of the Critically Endangered leatherback turtle to fisheries bycatch in the eastern Pacific Ocean. II. Assessment of mitigation measures
AU - Griffiths, Shane P.
AU - Wallace, Bryan P.
AU - Cáceres, Verónica
AU - Rodríguez, Luz Helena
AU - Lopez, Jon
AU - Abrego, Marino
AU - Alfaro-Shigueto, Joanna
AU - Andraka, Sandra
AU - Brito, María José
AU - Bustos, Leslie Camila
AU - Cari, Ilia
AU - Carvajal, José Miguel
AU - Clavijo, Ljubitza
AU - Cocas, Luis
AU - de Paz, Nelly
AU - Herrera, Marco
AU - Lauritsen, Ann Marie
AU - Mangel, Jeffrey C.
AU - Pérez-Huaripata, Miguel
AU - Piedra, Rotney
AU - Dávila, Javier Antonio Quiñones
AU - Rendón, Liliana
AU - Rguez-Baron, Juan M.
AU - Santana, Heriberto
AU - Stacy, Brian
AU - Suárez, Jenifer
AU - Swimmer, Yonat
AU - Veelenturf, Callie
AU - Vega, Rodrigo
AU - Zárate, Patricia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The authors 2024. Open Access under Creative Commons by Attribution Licence. Use, distribution and reproduction are un restricted. Authors and original publication must be credited.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Industrial tuna and artisanal fisheries targeting multiple species in the eastern Pacific Ocean (EPO) interact with the Critically Endangered East Pacific (EP) leatherback turtle Dermochelys coriacea. In 2021, a revised Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC) resolution on sea turtles aimed to reduce sea turtle bycatch in EPO industrial tuna fisheries and ensure their safe handling and release. A new ecological risk assessment approach—Ecological Assessment for the Sustainable Impacts of Fisheries (EASI-Fish)—was used to assess vulnerability status and to better understand the potential efficacy of 70 scenarios that compared simulated conservation and management measures (CMMs) for EPO industrial (purse-seine and longline) and artisanal (longline and gillnet) fisheries to the status quo in 2019. In 2019, a fishing mortality proxy (F ̃ 2019) and the breeding stock biomass per recruit (BSR2019) exceeded precautionary biological reference points (F80% and BSR80%), classifying the stock as ‘most vulnerable’. Industrial and artisanal longline fisheries had the highest impacts because they had the highest areal overlap with the modelled EP leatherback distribution. Of the 70 CMM scenarios, 42 resulted in significant improvements in vulnerability status (i.e. to ‘least vulnerable’). The use of large circle hooks, finfish bait, and best handling and release practices each decreased vulnerability; however, the most effective scenarios involved using these 3 measures in concert. The benefits predicted from EASI-Fish for CMM scenarios assume full compliance and attaining the modelled levels of efficacy, our modelling provides stakeholders with evidence-based recommendations to address key threats to EP leatherback turtles to improve their conservation status by reducing fishing impacts.
AB - Industrial tuna and artisanal fisheries targeting multiple species in the eastern Pacific Ocean (EPO) interact with the Critically Endangered East Pacific (EP) leatherback turtle Dermochelys coriacea. In 2021, a revised Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC) resolution on sea turtles aimed to reduce sea turtle bycatch in EPO industrial tuna fisheries and ensure their safe handling and release. A new ecological risk assessment approach—Ecological Assessment for the Sustainable Impacts of Fisheries (EASI-Fish)—was used to assess vulnerability status and to better understand the potential efficacy of 70 scenarios that compared simulated conservation and management measures (CMMs) for EPO industrial (purse-seine and longline) and artisanal (longline and gillnet) fisheries to the status quo in 2019. In 2019, a fishing mortality proxy (F ̃ 2019) and the breeding stock biomass per recruit (BSR2019) exceeded precautionary biological reference points (F80% and BSR80%), classifying the stock as ‘most vulnerable’. Industrial and artisanal longline fisheries had the highest impacts because they had the highest areal overlap with the modelled EP leatherback distribution. Of the 70 CMM scenarios, 42 resulted in significant improvements in vulnerability status (i.e. to ‘least vulnerable’). The use of large circle hooks, finfish bait, and best handling and release practices each decreased vulnerability; however, the most effective scenarios involved using these 3 measures in concert. The benefits predicted from EASI-Fish for CMM scenarios assume full compliance and attaining the modelled levels of efficacy, our modelling provides stakeholders with evidence-based recommendations to address key threats to EP leatherback turtles to improve their conservation status by reducing fishing impacts.
KW - Artisanal fisheries
KW - Dermochelys coriacea
KW - Ecological risk assessment
KW - Fisheries bycatch
KW - Longline
KW - Sea turtle
KW - Tuna
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85192983323&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3354/ESR01305
DO - 10.3354/ESR01305
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85192983323
SN - 1863-5407
VL - 53
SP - 295
EP - 326
JO - Endangered Species Research
JF - Endangered Species Research
ER -