4.2 Article

Shark depredation in a commercial trolling fishery in sub-tropical Australia

期刊

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
卷 676, 期 -, 页码 19-35

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INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps13847

关键词

Depredation; Fishing effort; Shark behaviour; Fisheries management; Generalized additive mixed models; Spanish mackerel; Scomberomorus commerson

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  1. School of Biological Sciences

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The study utilized a 13-year dataset from the Mackerel Managed Fishery in Western Australia to quantify the impact of fishing effort and environmental variables on shark depredation. Results showed varying depredation rates across different management zones and a positive correlation between commercial fishing activity, recreational fishing effort, and shark depredation.
Shark depredation, whereby hooked fish are partially or completely consumed before they can be retrieved, occurs globally in commercial and recreational fisheries. Depredation can damage fishing gear, injure sharks, cause additional mortality to targeted fish species and result in economic losses to fishers. Knowledge of the mechanisms behind depredation is limited. We used a 13 yr dataset of fishery-dependent commercial daily logbook data for the Mackerel Managed Fishery in Western Australia, which covers 15 degrees of latitude and 10 000 km of coastline, to quantify how fishing effort and environmental variables influence depredation. We found that shark depredation rates were relatively low in comparison with previous studies and varied across the 3 management zones of the fishery, with 1.7 % of hooked fish being depredated in the northern Zone 1, 2.5 % in the central Zone 2 and 5.7 % in the southern Zone 3. Generalized additive mixed models found that measures of commercial fishing activity and a proxy for recreational fishing effort (distance from town centre) were positively correlated with shark depredation across Zones 1 and 2. Depredation rates increased during the 13 yr period in Zones 2 and 3, and were higher at dawn and dusk, suggesting crepuscular feeding in Zone 1. This study provides one of the first quantitative assessments of shark depredation in a commercial fishery in Western Australia, and for a trolling fishery globally. The results demonstrate a correlation between fishing effort and depredation, suggesting greater fishing effort in a concentrated area may change shark behaviour, leading to high rates of depredation.

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