Dolphin killed by pair-trawling. Thousands of porpoises and dolphins die every year as accidental bycatch.
Enlarge Image
Many fisheries catch fish other than the ones that they target and in many cases these are simply thrown dead or dying back into the sea. In some trawl fisheries for shrimp, the discard may be 90 percent of the catch. Other fisheries kill seabirds, turtles and dolphins, sometimes in huge numbers.
Estimates vary as to how serious a problem bycatch is. Latest reports
suggest that around eight percent of the total global catch is discarded, but
previous estimates indicated that around a quarter of might be
thrown overboard. Simply no-one knows how much of a problem this really
is.
The incidental capture, or bycatch, of mammals, sea-birds, turtles,
sharks and numerous other species is recognised to be a major problem
in many parts of the world. This figure includes non-target species as
well as targeted fish species that cannot be landed because they are,
for instance, undersized. In short, anywhere between 6.8 million and 27
million tonnes of fish could be being discarded each year, reflecting
the huge uncertainties in the data on this important issue.
The scale of this mortality is such that bycatch in some fisheries may
affect the structure and function of marine systems at the population,
community and ecosystem levels. Bycatch is widely recognised as one of
the most serious environmental impacts of modern commercial fisheries.
The victims
Different types of fishing practices result in different animal/species
being killed as bycatch: nets kill dolphins, porpoises and whales,
longline fishing kills birds, and bottom trawling devastates marine
ecosystems.
It has been estimated that a staggering 100 million sharks and
rays are caught and discarded each year. Tuna fisheries, which in the
past had high dolphin bycatch levels, are still responsible for the
death of many sharks. An estimated 300,000 cetaceans
(whales, dolphins and porpoises) also die as bycatch each year, because
they are unable to escape when caught in nets.
Birds dive for the bait planted on long fishing lines, swallow it (hook
included) and are pulled underwater and drowned. Around 100,000
albatrosses are killed by longline fisheries every year and because of
this, many species are facing extinction.
Bottom trawling is a destructive way of 'strip-mining' the ocean floor,
harvesting the species that live there. As well as the target fish
species, this also results in bycatch of commercially unattractive
animals like starfish and sponges. A single pass of a trawl removes up
to 20 percent of the seafloor fauna and flora. The fisheries with the
highest levels of bycatch are shrimp fisheries: over 80 percent
of a catch may consist of marine species other than the shrimp
being targeted.
Technology
Many technical fixes exist to reduce bycatch. Turtle exclusion devices
are used in some shrimp fisheries to avoid killing turtle species. In
the case of longline fisheries, the process of setting the hooks can be
changed and bird-scaring devices employed which radically cut the
numbers of birds killed. To avoid dolphins being caught in nets other
devices can be used. Pingers are small sound-emitting and
dolphin-deterring devices that are attached to nets, but they are not
always effective. Escape hatches (consisting of a widely spaced metal
grid, which force the cetacean up and out of the net) have also been
used.
Although these devices may have a role to play, they cannot
address the whole problem. Such devices need continual monitoring to
check how well they work and assess any potential negative effects they
may have. Realistically they will probably only be used in areas with
well-developed fishery management and enforcement agencies.
On a global level, probably the only effective way to address the
problems of bycatch is to control fishing effort. This will be best
achieved through the creation of marine reserves. Nonetheless, in the
case of highly mobile species such as seabirds and cetaceans, the only
effective way of preventing bycatch is to discontinue the use of
particularly damaging fishing methods.