The impact of fishing on seagrass beds 1. 7. The impact of fishing on the seabed (soft and hard bottoms) and its associated benthic communities 2. Gears and fleets of special interest with respect to fishing impacts in Mediterranean waters 2. 1. The ecosystem impact of bottom trawling 2. 2. The impact of longlining on large pelagic populations 2. 3. The ecosystem impact of artisanal gears 2. 4. The case of Mediterranean driftnet fisheries 3. General discussion and conclusions: the ecosystem effects of fishing in the Mediterranean and their remedy from a systemic perspective References i ii 1 1 5 8 12 15 21 23 26 26 29 31 34 35 38 i Foreword
Foreword About this document This document is intended as a contribution to the strategic action plans to limit the impact of fishing activities on biological diversity in the Mediterranean under the Strategic Action Plan for Biodiversity (SAP Biodiversity), which is expected to provide a logical basis for the implementation of the 1995 Specially Protected Areas Protocol (Barcelona Convention).
The work has been structured around a set of self-contained sections dealing with the main threats to marine biodiversity (including both vulnerable species and habitats) arising from fishing gears or practices in use in Mediterranean waters.
The issues have been dealt with in two sections, one on fishing impacts on vulnerable species and habitats, and the other on specific aspects related to selected fishing gears and practices of special interest in the Mediterranean. General single-species issues related to the overfishing of commercial species have been deliberately omitted from the analysis, since they are the object of extensive studies elsewhere and a great deal of attention is paid to them in other fora.
The Essay on How Human Activities Negatively Affect the Ecosystem
In various ecosystems, negative changes have been seen as consequences of human activities. Specifically, these various activities of people have been observed to contribute directly and indirectly to the negative changes and implications in one of the major ecosystems, the marine ecosystem. This paper suggests that many of the human activities employed in the environment, specifically the marine ...
The author has prepared an apparently classic analysis, useful for practical purposes, but tried to avoid the pitfall of a purely reductionistic dissecting of reality, aware of transversal or even higher-level issues connecting many of the individual questions analysed. An attempt has been made to give due weight to these interrelations as well as the overall ecosystem effects of fishing on the structure or functioning of the ecosystems (resulting from both past and present practices) throughout the different sections of this document.
The document’s chief merit is that it collates reliable information from different sources on the different ecosystem effects of fishing in the Mediterranean, and provides a coherent picture of the overall impact of fishing on regional biodiversity. Most of this integrative vision is specifically addressed in the conclusion section. This work is focused on the Mediterranean, discarding unnecessary or redundant information from other areas of the world, even if better studied.
Where information related to some of the major issues is scarce, special attention has been devoted to the few studies available, given their qualitative importance. The aim has been, thus, to produce a specifically Mediterranean document. Acknowledgements The author is indebted to many people who have kindly contributed to this article with documents or any other kind of valuable information, as well as, simply, sharing their points of view on different aspects. Especial thanks are given to: Juan Antonio
Caminas, Instituto Espanol de Oceanografia (Spain); John Cooper, BirdLife International (South Africa); Michael Earle, Green Party at the European Parliament (Belgium); Manel Gazo, Universitat de Barcelona (Spain); Pere Renom, Universitat de Barcelona (Spain); Harun Guclusoy, Ege Programi Underwater Research Society – Mediterranean Seal Research Group (Turkey); Ali Cemal Gucu, Middle East Technical University (Turkey), Jon Houghton, University of Wales Swansea (United Kingdom); William Johnson, The Monachus Guardian (Canada); Jordi Lleonart, Institut de Ciencies del Mar (Spain); Ramon Marti, SEO/BirdLife (Spain); Anna-Rosa Martinez, GRAIN (Spain); Arnau Mateu, Greenpeace (Spain); Antonio di Natale, Aquastudio (Italy), Ahmed Nouar, Universite des Sciences et de la Technologie Houari Boumediene El-Alia (Algeria); Roger Poland, MEDASSET (United Kingdom); Lily Venizelos, MEDASSET (Greece).
The Term Paper on Dams And Fun A Look At The Social Impact Dams Have On Whitewater Raftingfly fishing
Dams and Fun: a Look at the Social Impact Dams Have on Whitewater Rafting/Fly-Fishing Introduction Since ancient times people were constructing dams to protect themselves from floods, to generate electricity, for agricultural, industrial and other needs. More than 4,500 dams were built during the last fifty years to provide population with increasing demands in water and energy. Almost ? of world ...
i Foreword The preparation of this document was possible thanks to the support of Pere Oliver, FAO (Italy).
ii The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats 1. The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats 1. 1.
The impact of fishing on chondrichthyans Introduction International concern over the conservation of shark, ray and chimaera (chondrichthyans) populations has been growing during recent years. This group has been revealed as especially vulnerable to human exploitation, fishing mortality resulting from both direct fisheries as well as high by-catches as a consequence of the use of low selective gears. These species, by nature of their k-selected life history strategies i. e. slow growth and delayed maturation, long reproductive cycles, for example incubation in Squalus lasts up to 22 months, low fecundity and long life spans, and their generally high position in trophic food webs, are more likely to be affected by intense fishing activity than most teleosts (Stevens et al. , 2000; Castro et al. , 1999).
In this context, it is not surprising that after reviewing the status of some important shark fisheries, Castro et al. (1999) concluded that the history of shark fisheries indicates that intensive fisheries are not sustainable and that complete collapses of the fishery are not rare. In the case of chondrichthyans, it seems that increased survival of juveniles rather than increased fecundity provides greater resilience to fishing pressure (Brander, 1981), highlighting this as the key factor for the conservation of these species. Some international initiatives have been undertaken to deal with the problems related to the conservation of this group.
They include the creation of a Shark Specialist Group by the Species Survival Commission of the IUCN, and the agreement at the FAO meeting held in Rome in October 1998 to set up an International Plan of Action for the Conservation and Management of Sharks. CITES commissioned a study on the status and trade of sharks which resulted in the creation of a Technical Working Group in FAO on sharks. The CITES Convention held in Nairobi in April 2000, however, rejected the inclusion of white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) under Appendix I and basking shark (Cetorhinus maximus) and whale shark (Rhincodon typus) under Appendix II. In the Mediterranean, only Malta has adopted legislative measures to protect white and basking sharks.
The Essay on Red Snapper Fishing Regulations
Recommendation to implement different regulations on Red Snapper fishing. Many people like myself, look forward each year to the overly exciting fishing season to catch the beloved snapper. Season dates along with size and possession limits are nothing new to the fisherman; but when a council decides to shrink a fishing season that is normally a month long down to a meager 9 days it can be heart ...
Overview The world-wide consensus on the serious threats posed by fishing for the conservation of elasmobranch species is consistent with the information available on the Mediterranean. Demersal and pelagic fisheries are described separately given the different species involved and the corresponding impacting activities. Demersal fisheries The impact of demersal fishing on Mediterranean elasmobranch populations relates to both direct fishing and the high by-catches due to the low selectivity of fishing practices. Analyses of historical data on experimental surveys and fishery landings have proved useful in detecting clear population declines in some Mediterranean regions.
A study based on historical data from both bottom trawl surveys and commercial landing statistics in the Gulf of Lions points to the clear decline of demersal elasmobranch species populations since the 1960’s (Aldebert, 1997).
The area is exploited by a large trawling fleet (more than 200 vessels, accounting for 2/3 of the total catch) as well as by other small-scale fleets using various gears. Results from experimental trawl surveys indicate that the decline of elasmobranchs started on the continental shelf, and extended recently to the slope. Only 13 of the 25 species recorded in the years 1957-60 were still caught in the period 1994-95, a reduction in the number of chondrichthyan species of about 50%.
It is worth 1 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats noting that decreasing species were mainly fish with some economic value. This is the case of small sharks such as the smooth-hounds Mustelus mustelus and M. asterias, the smallspotted catshark (Scyliorhinus stellaris) and the longnose spurdog (Squalus blainvillei), as well as most of the rays. The latter seem to display a special vulnerability to fishing since only two, the starry ray, Raja asterias, and the thornback ray, R. clavata, of the ten species commercially exploited in the Gulf of Lions were still present in the last surveys; these were the most initially abundant species.
The Term Paper on Catch and Release Ploicies in Fishing
Every bass fisherman fishes for the same reason, in hopes of catching a ten-pound-plus bass. This dream will not be fulfilled if bass fishermen, as a brotherhood, do not practice catch and release.America's love affair with the catch-and-release ethic has had a profound impact on the sport of bass fishingover the past thirty years. Quite simply, it recycles the resource. But improper care and the ...
Analyses of data on commercial landings led to convergent results i. e. longnosed skate, Raja oxyrinchus, a species reaching maturity at a length of 120 cm in the Mediterranean, disappeared from landings as early as 1976. The evidence for population declines of chondrichtyan species in the North Tyrrhenian Sea is also conspicuous. Historical data series indicate that sharks and rays formed a bigger part of catches in the 50’s than they do today, to the point that some fisheries directed at species then abundant such as the picked dogfish (Squalus acanthias) and M. mustelus disappeared, as well as some species of Dasyatidae and Rhinobatidae (Serena and Abella, 1999).
This declining trend concerning chondrichthyan populations seems not to be exclusive to this region of the NW Mediterranean: similar situations have been reported concerning areas as distant as the Alboran Sea and the waters surrounding Malta (Aldebert, 1997; Stevens et al. , 2000).
Ray species appear to be especially vulnerable to fishing. In the Northern Tyrrhenian Sea, where an important trawling fleet operates, rays are reported to be among the most important components of the fish assemblages caught by the local beam trawling ‘rapido’ fleet harvesting in shallow waters. The corresponding catches by the otter trawling fleet are less important (Serena and Abella, 1999).
Catches are especially important in the region of Viareggio where high discards of juvenile specimens of the most abundant ray species there, R. asterias, not exceeding 28 cm (maturity is reached at a size ranging between 50-60 cm, depending on the sex), are known to occur although the population seems to be stable. As reported in Relini et al. (1999), the most important catches of ray in Italian waters correspond to R. clavata, a species abundant in trawling grounds whose juvenile fraction suffers high fishing mortality. Data on this species in the North Tyrrhenian suggest a very high exploitation level. The case of the brown ray (R. miraletus) is not very different.
The Essay on Cloning Endangered Species
Cloning is the production of duplicate copies of genetic materials, cells, or entire multi-cellular living materials. For years cloning had only been a fantasy, but with new scientific research cloning can be very successful. Because there are so many advantages in areas like agriculture, medicine, and biological research in producing genetically identical organisms, artificial cloning has become ...
Italian demersal fleets discard high levels of juvenile blackmouth catshark (Galeus melastomus) and smallspotted catshark (Scyliorhinus canicula), species captured with bottom trawl nets at different depths (Relini et al. , 1999).
The former is mainly caught as a by-catch in the Norway lobster and red shrimp fisheries. Improved gear selectivity based on an increased mesh size has been suggested as a way of reducing these undesirable catches. In the case of G. melastomus, a significant reduction of fishing in the nursery areas may also be necessary, especially in the well-known one located in the Northern Tyrrhenian Sea between Gorgona and Capraia at depths around 200 m. Another species, S. lainvillei, was formerly quite common in the Northern Tyrrhenian Sea, whereas at present the population has been considerably reduced because of the high by-catches by the bottom trawl fisheries. As far as other minor species are concerned, S. acanthias and M. mustelus are captured in Italian waters using traditional bottom nets, as well as longlines and gillnets. The gulper shark (Centrophorus granulosus) is caught as a by-catch of traditional bottom trawl nets in slope fisheries. Chondrichthyan species, mainly involving species of Raja, Scyliorhinus, Squalus and Oxynotus genera also account for the bulk of discards produced by the Greek trawling fleet operating in the Cyclades area in the Aegean Sea (Vassilopoulou and Papaconstantinou, 1998).
Demersal Mediterranean fisheries also impact on large pelagic species such as the white shark (Carcharodon carcharias), a species listed in the Barcelona convention (Annex II) and Bern Convention (Appendix II) and represented by a very low-density population in the Mediterranean. The Sicilian Channel waters, however, are considered as a major area of abundance and 2 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats reproduction of white sharks within the entire NE Atlantic/Mediterranean region (Fergusson, 1996).
This species seem to have been in general decline in Mediterranean waters since 1960. Given the vulnerability of the enclosed Mediterranean population, incidental catches are of special concern. Fergusson et al. 1999) report that large individuals are incidentally entangled in bottom gillnets set close to Filfla Islet and off Marsaloxlokk in Malta, at seabed depths of 15 to 30 m; the same authors refer to white shark catches in similar circumstances in Sicily, Greece and Turkey in recent years. Young -including young of the year- white sharks are also caught elsewhere in the Mediterranean, off Algeria, France and in the North Aegean. The majority of these catches, however, originate from the Sicilian Channel during high summer, being due to trawlers based in Sicily (Fergusson, 1998).
The Essay on Ocean Fisheries Fish Fishing Species
Most people are familiar with the problems of the blue whale, efforts to save endangered sea turtles, and the many tragic tales of dolphins dying in tuna nets. Many people do not realize the extreme danger that tuna and many other fish face. There is an alarming decline in fish populations, and this poses a dangerous threat to life in the ocean. If fish decline, so does the sea, into and unstable ...
Pelagic fisheries Large pelagic elasmobranchs are regularly caught in the Mediterranean, mainly as a by-catch in the longline swordfish (Xiphias gladius) fishery. Some of these species are landed and marketed.
The blue shark (Prionace glauca) is perhaps the most impacted species, though because of its relatively high fecundity (Compagno, 1984) it seems to rank high on the scale of shark species resilience to fishing (Smith et al. , 1998).
The ratio of by-catches varies depends on the area. The swordfish/blue shark ratio for the Ionian longline fleet in Italian waters from 1978-1981 was as low as 1. 6:1, pointing to very high shark catches; in other areas the relative weight of shark by-catch was somewhat minor. This is the case in the Southern Adriatic (3. 4:1) and in the protected area formerly known as Santuario dei Cetacei in the Western-Central Ligurian Sea, where the ratio was only 18-20:1, perhaps reflecting a low density of the species there, where high densities of other apical predators are recorded (Orsi Relini, in press; Orsi Relini et al. 1999).
Much lower numbers of other elasmobranch species such as the thresher shark (Alopias vulpinus), the shortfin mako (Isurus oxyrinchus) and the porbeagle (Lamna nasus) are also part of the commercial fraction of the longline by-catch in the latter protected area (Orsi Relini et al. , 1999).
The monitoring of landings from the Spanish Mediterranean swordfish fishery (longlines) at ports between Alicante and Algeciras (S Spain) conducted during summer 1998, revealed that blue shark made up about onequarter of total landings; more than 500 individuals were recorded (Raymakers and Lynham, 1999).
Furthermore, finning, the cutting of the shark fin and the discarding of the rest of the animal, is probably practised in the Mediterranean high seas by longline fleets making long trips (Orsi Relini, in press).
Blue shark game fishing is also a matter for concern, especially in the Adriatic Sea, where a nursery area is known to exist and large amounts of juveniles are caught (Orsi Relini, in press).
Surface fisheries targeting large pelagics in the Mediterranean also entail incidental catches of white shark (Carcharodon carcharias).
The bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) longline fishery operating from Marsaxlokk in Malta reports by-catches of neonatal white sharks in international waters near Lampedusa and Lybia (Fergusson et al. , 1999).
Similarly, the swordfish longline fleet based at Mazara del Vallo, Sicily is also known to catch neonatal specimens incidentally (Fergusson, 1998).
All of them come from the breeding ground located in the Sicilian Channel.
Adult individuals are also caught in the vicinity of Filfla Islet by the pelagic line fleet based at the Maltese port of Wied-iz-Zurrieq, while other specimens fall into tuna traps ‘tonnara’ in bays along northern Malta. Pelagic or bentopelagic stingrays (Dasyatis spp. ) are also important victims of certain pelagic Mediterranean fisheries. In the longline fleet (about 27 units using ‘palamito da pesce spada’) fishing in the former Santuario dei Cetacei in the Western Central Ligurian Sea, pelagic stingray (D. violacea) largely dominates the fraction of the non-commercial by-catch, being caught in large numbers. Even some specimens of devil fish (Mobula mobular), a species listed in Annex II of the Barcelona Convention, are regularly caught in this fishery. D. iolacea has also been reported to be victim of Spanish fleets in the swordfish longline fishery in the South Western Mediterranean (Aguilar et al. , 1992).
3 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats Together with longlines, driftnets are still responsible for considerable mortality in pelagic elasmobranch species, which frequently entangle in them. In Algeria, where this fishery is carried out in spite of being legally banned, catches of blue shark, and to a lesser extent, of other species of the Alopiidae and Carcharhinidae families are known to occur (A. Nouar, per. com. ).
Important commercial catches of A. vulpinus and blue shark, as well as minor discards of D. violacea, M. obular and even basking shark (Cethorhinus maximus, listed in Annex II of the Bern Convention) have also been reported for the driftnet fishery operating in the Ligurian Sea (Di Natale, et al. , 1992).
Conclusions Most recent studies show that Mediterranean fisheries are not an exception in the context of the general declining trend showed by elasmobranch populations and their related fisheries around the world. Information on rays and other demersal species deserves special concern, since they have proved to be highly vulnerable to fishing. The high elasmobranch by-catches (and even commercial catches) associated with many pelagic fisheries, notably long-lining, also appear to be a potential danger for several species e. g. blue shark, white shark and stingrays.
In this context, the accurate monitoring of catches and the assessment of the impacted populations should be implemented in order to decide how and where to launch measures effective in reducing fishing mortality on target or by-catch chondrichthyan species. Given the usually high trophic level of these species, the conservation of the diversity of this group of important predators (some of them apical), is essential for the health of the ecosystems, as population changes could cascade down with unpredictable effects on many trophic webs. The establishment of marine protected areas in nursery grounds or in areas of special interest, the complete elimination of the most impacting gears such as driftnets and the improvement of the selectivity of surface long-lining and bottom trawling in order to reduce by-catches are among the necessary shortest-term measures.
Given the role of apex predator played by many elasmobranch species, a systemic management leading to the adequate conservation of the whole ecosystems, including healthy levels of other fish populations, appears to be necessary. This would apply to the case of the meagre Mediterranean white shark population, which is though to suffer from the overfishing of its main prey species, large pelagic fishes such as bluefin tuna (Fergusson et al. , 1999).
Finally, the overall management policy regarding the exploitation of elasmobranch populations, including commercial fisheries, and the related commercialisation processes should perhaps be revised in the light of the latest indicators pointing to the non-sustainability of current practices. 4 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats 1. 2.
The impact of fishing on seabirds Introduction Very little attention had been paid until recently to the impact of Mediterranean fisheries on seabird populations. However, studies carried out in the last years, mainly in the NW Mediterranean region, have revealed strong and complex interactions of world-wide interest. The effects of fishing on bird populations may be directly responsible for mortality as when caused by low selective fishing practices, or more indirect as when play the role of external perturbations that fundamentally affect food supplies and subsequently lead to major modifications in trophic habits, demographic parameters and inter-specific relationships. The key feature affecting seabird populations are precisely mortality rates.
Procellariiforms, as well as Pelecaniforms and Laridae species are generally long-lived and their populations are highly sensitive to changes in survival. The additional mortality induced by accidental captures in fisheries is therefore a significant danger to them (Lebreton, 2000).
In 1999 the FAO Committee of Fisheries (COFI) designed an International Plan of Action-Seabirds on accidental bird catches in longlines, open to the voluntary adhesion of all countries with longline fleets. BirdLife started a Program for the Conservation of Sea Birds in 1997 as a result of the resolution on Incidental Mortality of Sea Birds in Long-lines, adopted by the IUCN at its First World Conservation Congress.
Three Mediterranean seabird species are currently covered by specific Action Plans designed by BirdLife International, approved by the Ornis Committee (EU DG Environment) and endorsed by the Bern Convention Standing Committee. They include Audouin’s gull (Larus audouinii), the Balearic shearwater (Puffinus mauretanicus) and the Mediterranean shag (Phalacrocorax aristotelis desmaresti).
Overview The information available on the Mediterranean basin will be presented under two different categories, namely the direct and the indirect effects, following the criterion found in Tasker et al. (2000), and given the diversity of fishing effects recorded on seabird populations.
Direct effects These refer to seabird by-catches related to impacting fishing practices, notably long-lining. Data on mortality levels exist only for Spanish fisheries, being Spain only one of the 12 Mediterranean countries known to undertake longline fishing. (Cooper et al. , 2000).
A specific study addressing the impact of longlines on Mediterranean seabird species has recently been carried out in the Spanish fishery around the Columbretes Islands, in the NW Mediterranean (Marti, 1998).
A local fleet using both bottom and surface longlines operates there, targetting hake and swordfish respectively. On-board observations during the summer months revealed that six different species preyed on the baited hooks during the process of line setting.
These included Cory’s shearwater (Calonectris diomedea), the Balearic shearwater (Puffinus mauretanicus), the Atlantic gannet (Morus bassanus), Audouin’s gull (Larus audouinii) and the yellow-legged gull (Larus cachinans).
In addition, fishermen referred to the capture of specimens of great skua (Stercorarius skua) and Mediterranean shag (Phalacrocorax aristotelis desmaresti).
Incidental catches affected mostly Cory’s shearwater, accounting for 77% of the total bird by-catch, followed by the yellow-legged gull (14%) and the Atlantic gannet (9%).
The incidence was higher for bottom long-lining (0. 72 birds caught per 1000 hooks, against only 0. 22 for surface long-lining).
Although the average capture rate for the overall fleet was estimated to be 0. 4 individuals per gear setting, sporadic massive catches are known to happen: 200 Balearic shearwater were reported to have been caught during a single bottom longline setting in 1997. Several reasons point to both shearwater species as the most impacted seabirds in this fishery. So, whilst Cory’s is the most affected in numerical terms, 5 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats the Balearic shearwater is a Balearic endemic species facing a regressive trend, half its global population wintering in the area of the study. Concerning the former, fishing mortality caused by long-lining on the populations breeding in the Columbretes Is. and the Balearic Is. has been estimated at 550 and 1300 individuals, respectively (Aguilar, 1998).
The high sensitivity of Cory’s shearwater to high levels of mortality on the adult population make these figures a matter of concern since 60% of individuals hooked are adults (Marti, 1998).
All evidence points to the nonsustainability of present by-catch rates (Cooper et al. , 2000).
Another study based on the monitoring of 557 fishing operations carried out during 1999 and 2000 by the Spanish surface longline fleet in the Western Mediterranean also showed that Cory’s shearwater, together with the yellow-legged gull, accounted for almost the totality of by-catches (20 out of the total 21 birds caught), which also took place mainly during the setting of the gears (Valeiras and Caminas, 2000).
Other information regarding longline fisheries from Greece and Malta confirms the results of the Spanish studies, in the sense that C. diomedea appears to be the seabird species most affected by this fishing practice in the Mediterranean (Cooper et al. , 2000).
Nets also cause mortality in seabird species, since both Audouin’s gull and the yellow-legged gull have been reported to entangle in nylon mesh in the Chafarinas Islands, the small Spanish archipelago off Morocco (De Juana and De Juana, 1984).
Indirect effects The effects of fishing-induced changes in food availability on seabird populations have been studied most closely in the NW Mediterranean.
This region is characterised by being inhabited by the bulk of the world population of the rare Audouin’s gull (Larus audouinii), whose world’s largest colony-accounting for 62% of the global breeding population of 18,690 pairs–is found in the Ebro Delta, in the Iberian Peninsula (Martinez, 2000).
This species, a specialist predator on shoaling clupeoids, relies heavily on discards. An important fleet of both otter trawlers and purse seiners operates in the vicinity of the Ebro Delta, supplying the seabird species breeding there with additional food . An extensive study on the use of discards by seabirds was carried out in the Ebro Delta region and in the Island of Mallorca (Oro and Ruiz, 1997).
In the former area, because of the illegal fishing of anchovy by trawlers, a high amount of sardines are discarded, which together with flatfish make up half the total discards (estimated at between 15-45% of catches, and at 41% of fish landed).
This resource is mainly exploited by the Audouin’s gull, which is the most abundant species and, to a lesser extent, by the yellow-legged gull (Larus cachinnnans) and other gulls, terns and shearwaters. The field survey indicated that birds took 72% of total fish specimens discarded. In contrast, in the Mallorca fishery, with fleets mainly targeting shrimp on the slope bottoms, 40% of discards were crustaceans and boar fish (Capros aper), groups that are often rejected by scavenging birds.
Estimations based on energetic requirements show that discards in the Ebro Delta region are enough to sustain the populations of scavenging seabird species, which is not the case in Mallorca. Discards are also known to constitute the main forage resource for the lesser black-backed gull (Larus fuscus) in the Ebro Delta colony (Oro, 1996).
Closed seasons for trawling fleets based around the Ebro Delta overlap the breeding season of scavenging birds and negatively affect their breeding performance as reported for the lesser black-backed gull (Oro, 1996), the yellow-legged gull (Oro et al. , 1995) and Audouin’s gull (Oro et al. , 1996).
Abello et al. (2000), based on the attendance of seabirds at experimental trawl haulings on the Mediterranean Iberian coast confirmed the importance of trawl discards for Cory’s shearwater (Calonectris diomedea), the Balearic shearwater (Puffinus mauretanicus), Audouin’s gull and the yellow-legged gull. Purse seine fleets fishing at night affect the trophic availability of seabirds. A study carried out in the same area around the important bird sanctuary of the Ebro Delta shows that the different species exploit the opportunities offered by this fleet in different ways. Whereas the yellow-legged gull, 6 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats
Cory’s shearwater and the Balearic shearwater occasionally benefit from direct predation on discards, this is of limited importance given the low volume generated; Audouin’s gull is a nocturnal species specialised in capturing small pelagic fish and takes direct advantage of the fishing operation to capture the fish attracted by the lights or concentrated by the gear (Arcos et al. , 2000).
This association with purse seine fleets has also been confirmed by Gonzalez-Solis (2000) for the yellow legged gull and Audouin’s gull around the Chafarinas Islands, where bottom trawl and purse seine fisheries operate. The two species have a similar diet there and account for as much as 60% of epipelagic fish when both fleets are active simultaneously. Conclusions Longline fishing is evidently the main cause of seabird mortality in Mediterranean fisheries. Bottom and surface longlining are both implicated since bird mortality is associated with the process of longline setting and independent of the depth targeted by the gear.
The above study on the Columbretes fishery concludes that nocturnal setting prevents bird predation of baits, and reports that this measure, which involves a change in fishing habits, has already been implemented spontaneously by fishermen in the area in order to prevent the negative economic consequences arising from the interaction with birds. This appears to be the most realistic remedy for artisanal fisheries, though its efficacy is reduced on full-moon nights. Other complementary measures such as training lines with floats attached to frighten birds away are also in use in that region to some effect. As for the industrial fleets i. e. large surface longlines targeting large pelagics potentially affording higher investments, Marti (1998) acknowledges the feasibility of using pipe devices, that is the Mustad design, which allow the underwater setting of lines, precluding any possibility of bait predation by birds.
Tackling the issue of the impact of fisheries on seabirds related to the increase in food availability appears to be very difficult since a clear consensus on what human effects are positive or negative at an ecosystem level is apparently lacking. The above reported case of trawling discards in the Ebro Delta is a good example of this. Whilst some authors refer to the negative effects of closed seasons on several gull species, it should be pointed out that seabirds there benefit largely from discards arising from an illegal fishing activity, since the use of trawling to catch small pelagics is forbidden in Spain. Moreover, the very discards constitute a negative effect of fishing on the overall ecosystem that should be minimised.
Demersal populations in the region are heavily fished or even overfished and limitations on fishing are urgently needed (Lleonart, 1990; Irazola et al. , 1996).
The distinction between direct (fishing mortality) and indirect (trophic availability) effects of fishing is nonetheless somewhat vague, highlighting the complexity that underlies ecosystems. In two very different Mediterranean areas, the NW Mediterranean and the Alboran Sea, the predatory behaviour of the yellow-legged gull on Audouin’s gull (even adults) was reported to increase following the elimination of discards caused by temporary fishing moratoria (Gonzalez-Solis, 2000; Martinez-Abrain et al. , 2000).
Marti (1998) noted that the majority of Audouin’s gulls caught by the longline fleet operating around the Columbretes Is. were caught during the trawling closed season, suggesting that trawling moratoria could enhance the incidence of longline by-catches. 7 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats 1. 3. The impact of fishing on turtles Introduction Loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta), green turtle (Chelonia mydas) and leatherback turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) are the most common species of marine turtles in the Mediterranean, though only the former two are known to nest on Mediterranean beaches. All three are endangered species (UNEP/IUCN, 1990).
It is estimated that only 300-400 green turtle females and about 2000 Loggerheads nest annually in the Mediterranean (Groombridge, 1990), the latter laying between 3000-4000 nests every year (Groombridge 1989 & UNEP/IUCN, 1990).
Total adult populations are somewhat higher given that most of the individuals do not breed every year. In the case of the Loggerhead, an additional contingent of individuals of Atlantic origin is known to migrate into the W Mediterranean across the Gibraltar Strait, during the first half of the year (Caminas, 1997a, b).
A third nesting species, not strictly marine, the Nile soft-shelled turtle (Trionix triunguis) is found in a few coastal wetlands in the Eastern Mediterranean.
The 1991 Bern Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats recommended to the Council of Europe that this subtropical species be given better protection. Turkey is a key country regarding the total number of nesting females for the three mentioned species breeding in the Mediterranean, though fishing practices around the entire basin affect their populations. A demographic model for the Mediterranean population of Loggerhead turtle showed that adult survival was the main factor affecting population growth rates, fecundity being less significant (Laurent et al. , 1992).
This emphasises the importance of limiting fishing by-catches of these species.
International concern about the general decline of the marine turtle population in the Mediterranean led the parties to the Barcelona Convention to adopt an Action Plan for the Conservation of Mediterranean Marine Turtles in 1989, acknowledging that catches by fishermen are the most serious threat to the turtles at sea, and that the conservation of the green turtle deserved special priority. Overview Mediterranean fisheries have an enormous impact on the local turtle stock: more than 60,000 turtles are caught annually as a result of fishing practices, mortality rates ranging from 10% to 50% of individuals caught (Lee and Poland, 1998).
The problems related to the interaction between fisheries and turtles in the Mediterranean are, to a large extent, common to the different species. However, local features can affect breeding or wintering populations of turtles differently in different areas.
These, and other considerations related to the status of different populations suggest the convenience of reporting separately on each of the most important species. Loggerhead turtle The Loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta) is the most abundant marine turtle species breeding in Mediterranean waters. The Ionian Sea constitutes its major breeding ground, the coasts of Western Greece being of paramount importance. The gulf of Laganas off the island of Zakynthos, has one of the highest densities of nests in the world and the beaches of the island of Kefalonia and other Ionian islands, as well as the west coast of the Peloponesus (Margaritoulis and Dimopoulos, 1995; Margaritoulis et al. , 1995) are also important.
Other nesting areas are found in Turkey, Cyprus, Tunisia, Egypt and Libya (Demetropoulos, 1998; Laurent et al. , 1995).
Surface longline and driftnet fleets operating in the Mediterranean are the major threats to the survival of this species, although bottom trawls and gillnets are responsible for some catches. 8 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats A study addressing the by-catch of turtles by the swordfish longline fleet based at Kefalonia, which operates mainly in the Central and South Ionian Sea, lasting from 1989 to 1995, showed that each vessel caught an average of 7. 7 loggerhead turtles every year (Panou et al. , 1999).
Although nesting season in that area coincides with the peak of the swordfish fishery, 77% of individuals caught were immature, highlighting the especial vulnerability of this group to fishing (though Salter (1995) alternatively suggests that this fact could reflect the capture of adults by driftnets).
Extrapolating these data to the total professional Greek longline fleet in the Ionian Sea (which accounts for more than 50% of total Greek fishing effort in western Greece), an estimated figure of 280 turtles caught per year is obtained. The additional impact of the 30-50 Italian driftnet vessels operating in the same area gives a total estimateed annual by-catch of 600 individuals.
A former study referring to the Spanish longline fleet targeting swordfish in the South Western Mediterranean (up to 60-80 vessels in the summer months, in the early 90’s) suggested that turtle by-catches in this region are dramatically higher (Aguilar et al. , 1992).
Rates as high as 6. 5-9. 8 turtles per day and boat were recorded during 1990 and 1991, allowing for an estimated total catch ranging from 22,000 to 35,000 individuals each year, 66% of catches being concentrated in only two months (July and August).
Estimates of total catches by the Spanish longline fleet in the Mediterranean for the period 1988-1996 oscillate from 1,953 individuals in 1993 to 23,888 in 1990 (Caminas, 1997b).
By-catches by the foreign industrial longline fleets operating in the area (Japanese, flag of convenience,) could lead to even higher figures.
A recent survey carried out from July to December 1999 to assess the by-catch by the Spanish longline fleets targeting swordfish and albacore in the Mediterranean, under a EC DG XIV research project, showed that 280 fishing hauls yielded a total by-catch of 496 loggerhead turtles (Caminas and Valeiras, 2000).
The albacore fishery (with hooks set deeper in the sea) resulted in higher by-catch rates: 1. 05 turtles per 1,000 hooks, against 0. 33 from swordfish longlining. All the individuals caught in the South Western Mediterranean are juveniles, reflecting the demographic structure of the population in the W Mediterranean, where adult individuals are only found, in small numbers, in winter.
It is important to note that individuals caught by the Spanish longline fleet have two different origins: Atlantic individuals entering the Mediterranean during the spring, and others belonging to the Central and Eastern Mediterranean breeding populations. Both groups migrate into the Western Mediterranean feeding grounds in spring and summer (Caminas, 1997a, b).
Loggerhead turtles have also been caught in high numbers by the Italian and Maltese surface longline fleets, the former mostly operating in the Gulf of Taranto, the South Adriatic and the Aegean Sea, including those targeting albacore (Caminas and De la Serna, 1995; Panou et al. , 1999; De Metrio et al. , 1997).
Turtles are also victims of fishing by-catches in Tunisian waters, which are thought to be important wintering grounds for the species (Panou et al. , 1999).
Longline fleets annually catch an estimated 4,000 individuals there (Salter, 1995; Demetropoulos, 1998).
Loggerhead also get entangled in driftnets, as reported by Di Natale (1995) for the Italian driftnet fishery taking place in the Ligurian and Tyrrhenian Seas (catch rates of 0. 057 and 0. 046 loggerhead per day and vessel, respectively).
40% of turtle catches occur in July. About 16,000 turtles were estimated to be caught annually by an Italian driftnet fleet operating in the Ionian Sea in the 80’s (De Metrio and Megalofonou, 1988).
As for the Spanish swordfish driftnet fleet operating in the Alboran Sea until 1994, Loggerhead turtles constituted 0. 32% of the catch in 1992 and 0. 92% in 1994 (Silvani et al. 1999).
An estimated 236 animals were caught incidentally in 1994, being released alive at sea. Further on-board observations regarding this Spanish driftnet fishery showed that important catches of Loggerhead in the Mediterranean side of the Gibraltar strait were recorded through July and August, when an important migration from the Mediterranean towards the Atlantic takes place (Caminas, 1995; 1997a).
Fixed nets also cause turtle mortality since turtles get caught in them when trying to feed on the entrapped fish, as happens in Kefalonia (Sugget and Houghton, 1998).
Loggerhead captures by 9 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats rawlers and purse seiners have also been reported for the Spanish Mediterranean coast (Caminas, 1997c).
Small annual catches of turtles (a mean of 1. 5 individuals per year and boat) by the Spanish tuna purse seine fleet don’t seem to be a mortality factor since turtles are released alive (University of Barcelona, 1995).
Total annual by-catches by the Tunisian small-scale fleet (comprising fixed nets, purse seines, bottom and surface longlines, and tuna fishing gears) operating in the Gulf of Gabes are estimated at 5,000 individuals (Bradai, 1995).
Another 2,000-2,500 turtles are caught by the trawling fleet, composed of 300 units, whereas illegal small trawlers are thought to capture additional hundreds to thousands of individuals annually.
The highest catch rates in the region correspond to bottom longliners (an average of nearly 23 turtles per boat and year).
Experimental studies on mortality rates of individuals injured by fishing gears show that 20-30% of the turtles caught by the longline Spanish fleets may die (Aguilar et al. , 1992).
80% of specimens caught in this fishery are released with the hook still fixed in the mouth, pharynx or oesophagus (Caminas and Valeiras, 2000).
Furthermore, the probability of drowning at the gear seems to be higher for turtles caught by the albacore longline fleet than for those captured in the swordfish fishery. Other studies report mortality affecting 10% to 50% of the individuals incidentally caught (Lee and Poland, 1998).
On the other hand, some observations seem to point to a rather fast degradation of non-stainless hooks in the mouth of the turtles released (2-3 months) (Panou et al. , 1999).
An estimated 30% of turtles caught entangled in the Italian driftnet fishery are drowned (De Metrio and Megalofonou, 1988).
Finally it is worth mentioning that experimental tagging is susceptible to make turtles more vulnerable to fishing by increasing the chance of entanglement (Suget and Houghton, 1998) as has been reported for the loggerhead population of Kefalonia. Green turtle The green turtle (Chelonia mydas) is represented in the Mediterranean waters by a reduced population nesting on only a handful of beaches in Cyprus and Turkey. The local stock seems to be the remnant of a former larger population.
Present recruitment rates are probably much lower than deaths related to fishing, and this could lead to the virtual collapse of the population in the near future (Demetropoulos, 1998).
The Turkish localities of Kazanli, Akyatan and Samandag, with about 1,000 nests laid annually and scattered along more than 40 km of beaches, are the most important nesting areas for this species in the Mediterranean (Goombridge, 1990).
Fishing activities, especially in the two former areas cause significant mortality at sea (Demirayak, 1999).
A fleet of trawlers, longliners and small-scale boats using nets operates intensively, even within the fishing-restricted coastal strip, off Kazantli.
Fishermen blame turtles for the damage they supposedly cause to their nets and dead specimens are often washed ashore. Fishermen from Karatas, the main port near the Akyatan nesting ground report numerous turtle captures, even in winter. Trawlers there also violate the three-mile coastal limit and seriously impact the green turtle population. Five trawling boats alone operating over 28 weeks have been reported as catching a total of 160 green turtles as well as 26 additional Loggerhead turtles. A survey based on interviews with artisanal fishermen (using both nets and longlines) in northern Cyprus and on the Turkish Mediterranean coast yielded estimated by-catches of 4 and 2. turtles per boat and year respectively, giving a total minimum estimate of about 2,000 turtles for the whole region (Godley et al. , 1998).
Even though 90% of the specimens were reported as having been caught alive, an unknown fraction of them could have been killed on board as fishermen perceive turtles as a nuisance. The authors of the report suggest that green turtles could possibly account for a significant proportion of turtles caught; this worrying given their demographic status. The green turtle is also sporadically caught as a by-catch in fisheries from other areas, for example by the Greek longline fleet operating in the Ionian Sea (Panou et al. , 1999).
10 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats
Other species The Nile soft-shelled turtle (Tryonix triunguis) is an endangered species found in only three major populations: the wetland of Dalyan and the Dalaman area, in south-western Anatolia, and the Alexandre River, in Israel (Kasparek and Kinzelbach, 1991).
The two former Turkish populations were discovered in the early 70’s (Basoglu, 1973), and a new locality for the species has recently been reported in Patara. Populations are extremely low, consisting of only 50 adult individuals in Dalyan and a further 75-125 adults and sub-adults in Dalaman. Fishermen catch them at sea and usually kill them deliberately as happens in the Cucurova region and the Goksu delta (Kasparek, 1999) because of the damage they cause to the nets. This poses a major threat to the species.
Fishermen from the Karatas harbour acknowledge that a remarkable amount of soft-shelled turtles are taken as a by-catch, and that they are commonly killed because they find them dangerous (Demirayak, 1999).
The leatherback turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) is also sporadically caught by the fleets operating in the Mediterranean. Cumulative evidence points to the existence of a reduced non-breeding population distributed in the whole Mediterranean Basin, where the species appears to be common or regular (Caminas, 1998).
Some incidental captures were reported in Tunisian waters during the 90’s, mostly by trammel nets, bottom trawls and driftnets (Bradai and El Abed, 1998).
Swordfish longlines appeared to be responsible for most of the incidental catches recorded in western Mediterranean waters (Crespo et al. 1988; Caminas, 1998), though some additional captures arose until the mid 90’s from the activity of the former Spanish swordfish driftnet fishery in the Alboran Sea (Caminas, 1995).
Monitoring of 15 longline vessels targeting swordfish in Spanish waters showed a catch of two specimens during two months of activity in the summer of 1991 (Aguilar et al. , 1992).
Two further individuals were entangled in longlines in the course of 217 fishing operations in 1999 (Caminas and Valeiras, 2000).
This species is also taken as a by-catch in Italian longline albacore fisheries (De Metrio et al. , 1997).
Conclusions Fishing in the Mediterranean basin is clearly a major threat to marine turtle populations.
The especial vulnerability of these species to high mortality rates of adults and sub-adults makes the maximisation of the survival of individuals at sea a priority, and this could be achieved by reducing the mortality caused by fishing gears. In surface longline fisheries, the hook should be removed whenever possible and the individuals immediately released; fishermen’s collaboration is essential. Specimens caught and released alive with hooks in their oesophagi or stomachs don’t necessarily survive. Turtles are not gastronomically appreciated in Greece, in contrast to some areas of Italy (the Apulian coast) and Egypt, but as stated by Panou et al. (1999), there is a danger that Greek crews, increasingly composed of foreign fishermen, may change this.
The delay in the total extirpation of driftnets from European waters, particularly Greek and Italian, and the continued and growing use of driftnets in key turtle conservation areas in waters off the north African coast and Turkey are further matters for concern. Turtles discarded from driftnets can also die because of anoxic brain damage as a result of prolonged immersion (Lee and Poland, 1998).
This and other above-mentioned factors point to the reduction of by-catches as the only effective way to eliminate fishing mortality. Special restrictive fishing measures affecting large pelagic fisheries could be applied in areas described in recent years with big populations of immature and adult Loggerheads. More specific measures should be taken in the vicinity of nesting beaches to prevent capture of adults.
This is particularly urgent for the green turtle because of its small breeding stock. Various fishing practices–even artisanal fleets–in these areas cause turtle mortality and fishing restrictions 11 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats are frequently violated in most coastal waters. In this context, the Standing Committee of the Bern Convention recommended that the Turkish government strictly control the fisheries in the three main nesting beaches of the green turtle (document T-PVS (98) 62).
The Turkish authorities have repeatedly been asked (from as early as 1994) to completely banning fishing at the Kazanli area during the nesting period, with little success to date.
The improvement of trawling gears by means of turtle excluding devices (TED), in use in several tropical regions (Villasenor, 1997), could be an effective measure in some cases where the impact of trawling on turtles is high (i. e. the Gulf of Gabes).
Reducing trawl times is effective in reducing turtle mortality; trawls not exceeding 60 minutes give a turtle mortality rate in the gear close to 0%, but this rises to 50% if fishing time increases to 200 minutes (Henwood and Stuntz, 1987).
Kasparev (1999) recommended stopping all kinds of fishing around Dalaman (including nets, lines, guns and dynamite) in order to protect the small local population of the soft-shelled Nile turtle.
In addition, methods for experimental tagging should be improved so as to reduce potential harmful effects such as entanglement in nets. Finally, campaigns designed to raise the awareness of stakeholders, primarily fishermen, should be undertaken along all the Mediterranean coasts to promote turtle-friendly fishing practices. 1. 4. The impact of fishing on Mediterranean monk seal populations Introduction The Mediterranean monk seal (Monachus monachus) is a highly endangered species whose distribution has shrunk considerably during the last decades. The bulk of the world population (about 300-500 individuals) is currently limited to only two nuclei, one in the eastern Mediterranean and the other in the north-east Atlantic, off the coast of north-west Africa.
The seal is listed as critically endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) and is also included in Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
It is also covered by the UNEP Bonn Convention on Migratory Species and the Bern Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats. An Action Plan for the Management of the Mediterranean Monk Seal was adopted in 1987, launched under the Barcelona Convention. All studies report that the Mediterranean monk seal population, consisting of only a few scattered groups of individuals breeding in the last isolated, undisturbed caves, is suffering a rapid decline. Two thirds of the world’s largest surviving population, located on the Cote des Phoques in the Western Sahara, died off in 1997, victim of an epidemic.
The remaining seals are extremely vulnerable and all evidence points to fishing as one of the main agents pushing the species to the brink of extinction, especially in the case of the eastern Mediterranean population (Johnson and Lavigne, 1998).
Overview The impact of fishing practices on monk seal population has a largely twofold origin: direct mortality caused by incidental entanglement in fishing gears and deliberate killing by fishermen, and food scarcity related to overfishing and subsequent depletion of fish populations. A third related factor is the trophic limitation triggered by overfishing that encourages seals to prey more heavily on fish entrapped in nets, thus increasing the interaction between seals and gears (and fishermen).
Johnson and Karamanlidis (2000) include a review of the entrapment of monk seals in fishing gears partially summarised in the following lines.
Monk seals may entangle and drown in fishing nets more often than is generally assumed; although the analysis of historical records shows that seals can be injured by many kinds of fishing gear, including purse seiners (Kirac and Savas, 1996), they 12 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats appear to be more vulnerable to static gears (stationary nets set on the bottom) and abandoned nets (ghost fishing effect).
As many as 23% of seal deaths recorded in the Greek Ionian Islands, were due to entanglements (Panou et al. , 1993).
Berkes et al. (1979), Kirac and Savas (1996) and Yediler and Gucu (1997) report a total 38 seal deaths between 1965 and 1994 in Mediterranean and Black Sea Turkish waters, 8 of them due to drowning by entanglement in nets, 16 killed by fishermen (1 of them as a result of dynamite fishing) and another 11 killed by dolphin hunters.
Entanglement also appear to be a major mortality factor in Moroccan waters, and responsible for 27 of 40 seal deaths reported during the 80’s (Anonymous, 1990).
Incidental entanglement as an agent of extinction is exemplified in the small colony inhabiting the cave known as the Grotta del Bue Marino, in the Tyrrhenian Island of Gorgona: all 8 specimens perished entangled in the nets of a local fisherman during the 1980’s (Guarrera, 1999).
A differential vulnerability to entanglement in nets has been suggested for adult and young monk seals in the Cilician Basin, off Turkey (Yediler and Gucu, 1997).
Whereas the trammel and gill nets used there may not be strong enough to trap adults, four pups were found entangled in fishing nets during a five-year period (Anonymous, 1999a).
Abandoned nets have caused significant seal mortality in the small population inhabiting the Desertas Is. in the Atlantic (Anselin and van der Elst, 1988).
The analysis of the 130 monk seal deaths recorded in the last 10 years, carried out by the NGO MOm (Anonymous, 1999b), shows that deliberate killing is the major direct threat to adult monk seals. Seals are perceived as a nuisance in many places, as in the Cilician Basin, and are ranked high among pests, together with dolphins and turtles, by fishermen because of the netted fish the seals consume and the damage they cause to the nets (Yediler and Gucu, 1997).
Seals can reduce nets to rags, often leaving a characteristic three-hole pattern (Berkes, 1982).
Studies carried out in the Ionian Sea showed that gears most damaged by seals were, in order of importance, inshore trammel nets, offshore trammel nets and gillnets; bottom longlines were much less affected (Panou et al. , 1993).
Fishermen report that seals attack nets mostly within 20-30 m of the surface (Johnson and Karamanlidis, 2000).
Deliberate killing of monk seal is a common practice in most of its range, and may have a considerablle local impact: six individuals were killed in the Aydincik region (Cilician coast, Turkey) in 1994 alone (Yediler and Gucu, 1997).
In general, fishermen’s attitudes to monk seals depend on the extent to which they perceive fishing as a capital-intensive economic activity. Thus many fishermen in the Aegean Sea believe that killing seals brings bad luck hilst younger fishermen who have invested heavily in fishing equipment seem to display the most aggressive and even cruel behaviour (Yediler and Gucu, 1997; Berkes, 1982).
In this context, it is worth mentioning that the length of net per fisherman increased by 5 along the coast off south-west Turkey bewteen 1950 and 1980 (Berkes, 1982).
Aquaculture exploitations are also related to the deliberate killing of monk seals, at least in the Bodrum peninsula (Turkey), and exacerbate the impact of small-scale fishermen. Aquaculture businesses apparently prefer to shoot seals rather than set predator nets limiting the damage seals can cause because it is cheaper to do so (Anonymous, 1999b).
Three main actors seem to play a role in the interaction between seals and fisheries, namely smallscale fisheries, medium-scale fisheries (trawlers and purse seiners) and seals. Whilst the conflictive relationships between fishing and seals are limited mainly to small-scale fleets using nets, mediumscale fleets worsen the situation because they are largely responsible for the overexploitation of fishing grounds. Illegal fishing by trawler fleets within the 3-mile coastal limit reserved for artisanal fleets, as reported for the Cilician Basin waters where a small monk seal population is found along the Anatolian coasts (Ozturk, 1992), is also common. Overfishing exacerbates the conflict between small-scale fishermen and monk seals, which may be forced to take fish from the nets.
As reported in Johnson and Karamanlidis (2000), some studies strongly suggest that seals may become dependent on commercial fishing for food, and exhausted fisheries have been linked to both the decline of monk seal populations and an increased frequency of their attacks on nets. Particularly destructive fishing practices also affect seals: illegal dynamite fishing in Kefallonia contributes to the scarcity of resources for the local monk seal population. Johnson and Karamanlidis (2000) also 13 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats refer to fishing with chemicals and the capture of small fry for aquaculture seed as negative harvesting practices threatening fish resources in the monk seal’s range in the eastern Mediterranean.
Tourism results in a rising seasonal demand for fish and may therefore be indirectly responsible for increased seal attacks on nets and the subsequent mortality associated with entanglements and deliberate killing (Panou et al. , 1993; Karavellas, 1994).
The illegal but widespread practice of dynamite fishing has an overall negative effect on the ecosystem as mentioned above, and injures and kills monk seals directly; several deaths, some of them very recent, due to this practice have been reported in Greek and Turkish waters (Anonymous, 1999b).
Conclusions Given the critical status of the Mediterranean monk seal remnant population, the only acceptable level of fishing-related mortality in the region is 0.
Action must be taken to prevent deliberate killings by fishermen, incidental entanglements in nets and to manage fisheries so as to prevent overfishing and rebuild depleted food resources (Johnson and Karamanlidis, 2000).
The participation of small-scale fishermen appears to be essential. Initiatives undertaken in recent years suggest that an integrated approach, comprising the protection of ecosystems through marine protected areas and the involvement of local artisanal fishermen, is likely to be most effective; this includes increasing artisanal fishermen’s awareness that they themselves, as well as the seals are victims of overfishing driven by commercial fisheries, mostly by medium-scale fleets.
The immediate financial compensation of fishermen affected by seal attacks and information campaigns to destroy negative myths about seals appear necessary. One such myth is that the wild seal population consumes a huge amount of fish; in fact, the entire Greek Aegean monk seal population consumes an estimated 750 kg of fish daily (Ronald, 1984).
SAD-AFA’s Central Aegean Programme started in 1992 as the Foca Pilot Project, operating in association with the local community and the Turkish Ministry of the Environment, and covers the NW corner of the Bay of Izmir. Industrial fishing is prohibited there and data suggest that the project is succeeding in its goal of recovering fish stocks (Johnson and Karamanlidis, 2000).
The implementation of more restrictive measures such as the banning of small fry fishing for aquaculture seed or the seasonal prohibition of the lampara fishery in the Bay of Izmir is still a priority. In the context of the Cilician Basin Project, the Turkish Ministry of Agriculture has banned all types of trawl and purse seine fishing in 15 square miles covering seal habitats. Small areas surrounding breeding caves have special protection as no-fishing zones. Other technical measures such as the improvement of fishing nets and the development of techniques for repelling seals from fishing equipments are envisaged by the Action Plan for the Management of the Mediterranean Monk Seal.
In summary, whereas some specific measures such as the enforcement of current regulations banning dynamite fishing and other highly damaging fishing practices known to affect monk seals should clearly be undertaken, the overall problem of monk seal conservation in the Mediterranean is clearly related to the sustainable management of entire marine ecosystems, in which monk seals are apex predators. Marine reserves, no-fishing zones and the involvement of artisanal fishermen-including educational programmes–are fundamental tools in ecosystem-based fisheries management. 1. 5. The impact of fishing on cetacean populations Introduction 14 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats
About 17 different cetacean species have been reported in Mediterranean waters, some of them being only occasional visitors from the Atlantic (Duguy et al. , 1983a).
They range in size from the small common (Delphinus delphis) and striped (Stenella coeruleoalba) dolphins to large whales such as the sperm whale (Physeter catodon) and the fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus).
In general, both the diversity and the abundance of cetaceans are higher in the Western Basin. The state of conservation and the size of the different populations are highly variable, depending on species and regions. The striped dolphin is the most abundant cetacean species in the western Mediterranean, with an estimated population of 117,880 individuals in 1991 (Forcada et al. , 1994).
The study of the distribution of this population, however, revealed important geographic heterogeneities, often related to specific oceanographic conditions resulting in higher food availability (Forcada and Hammond, 1998).
The most important population is found in the northwest Mediterranean, in the Ligurian Sea and Provenzal Basin (n: 42,604).
The other outstanding area for the species, in terms of population density, is the Alboran Sea, especially its western part neighbouring the Strait of Gibraltar. The common dolphin, in contrast, has become increasingly rare in north-western Mediterranean waters since the early 70’s; its population in the western Mediterranean is concentrated in the Alboran Sea (with a population estimated at 14,736 individuals in 1991-92).
The coastal strip of Morocco and Algeria seem to be a particularly important area for the species (Bayet and Beaubrun, 1987).
Maximum concentrations of fin whale in the Mediterranean are again recorded in the Ligurian-Provenzal Basin, where its summer population was estimated at 1,012 specimens in 1992 (Notarbartolo di Sciara, 1994).
There are probably only a few hundred sperm whales in the Mediterranean (Di Natale, 1995).
Other less abundant species include the harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena), whose population outside the Black Sea has declined to the verge of extinction, though some sightings point to its presence off North African coasts.
This variety of species of different sizes, displaying different life histories, together with the equally high diversity of gears and fishing practices found in the Mediterranean lead to complex interactions between cetacean populations and fisheries. As for marine turtles and monk seal, a specific Action Plan for the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Mediterranean Sea was adopted under the auspices of the Barcelona Convention in 1991. The reduction or depletion of food resources, incidental catches in fishing gears and deliberate killings are recognised as some of the most serious threats to cetaceans in the Mediterranean. The Action Plan called on all parties to adopt and implement legislation to prohibit the deliberate taking of cetaceans, the prohibition of driftnets longer than 2. km and the discarding of fishing gears at sea, and required the safe release of cetaceans caught accidentally. Contracting parties also agreed to promote the creation of a network of protected areas and marine sanctuaries in co-operation with RAC/SPA . The Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans of the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area (ACCOBAMS) has been signed by 14 states, though it is not yet in force since the ratification of a minimum number of parties is still pending. Among other measures, its conservation plan (Annex 2) envisages the implementation of measures to minimise the adverse effects of fisheries with explicit emphasis on driftnets.
This section focuses on the most indisputable effects of fishing on the Mediterranean cetacean population. The issue of massive natural or pollution-related deaths such as those of striped dolphins in the Mediterranean in the early 90’s following viral epizootic events, is deliberately avoided since it falls outside the scope of this work. Overview Cetacean populations suffer principally from the direct mortality caused by fishing gears whilst small cetaceans also compete for the fish taken in nets; furthermore, fishermen deliberately kill 15 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats dolphins to reduce the damage these inflict on their gears.
The most significant issue (in terms of both quantitative incidence and potential effect on cetacean populations), however, is the mortality derived from fishing by-catches, which is largely due to drifnetting practices. Information on the different interactions between cetaceans and fisheries is given below, with emphasis on the specific features of different fishing practices related to cetacean mortality. Driftnets There is a wide consensus about the high figures for cetacean by-catches and the very high mortality of individuals entangled in Mediterranean swordfish fisheries using driftnets. 37 cetaceans were caught in the Ligurian Sea in the summer of 1988 alone (Podesta and Magnaghi, 1989).
Di Natale (1995) studied the activity of the Italian driftnet fleet operating there and in the Tyrrhenian Sea in the early 90’s (1990-92).
On-board monitoring of 100 commercial trips revealed the entanglement of 15 cetaceans, 13 striped dolphins, one Cuvier’s beaked whale (Ziphius cavirostris) and one pilot whale (Globicephala melaena); only two animals could be released alive. The estimated catch rate was much higher in the Ligurian Sea, 0. 29 cetaceans per fishing day and vessel, against 0. 08 in the Tyrrhenian Sea. In the Ligurian Sea again, 35 fishing operations alone harvesting 144 swordfish accounted for by-catches of 10 cetaceans belonging to 3 different species (Di Natale et al. , 1992).
These high incidental captures of marine mammals, related to the important numbers of cetaceans in the area led in 1992 to the establishment of a driftnet-free “Santuario dei Cetacei” in Ligurian Sea waters. An estimated 1,682 cetaceans were taken by the whole Italian driftnet fishery in 1991 (Di Natale, 1995), including 1,363 striped dolphins, 132 pilot whales, 62 other delphinids, 79 Risso’s dolphins (Grampus griseus), 35 bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus), 8 sperm whales, 2 Cuvier’s beaked whales and 1 fin whale. The fishing effort of this fleet was concentrated mainly in the Tyrrhenian and Sardinian Seas during 1990-91, and an estimated 946 striped dolphins were captured there. The author concluded from these figures that the most impacted species appeared to be the striped dolphin, the sperm whale, the pilot whale and Risso’s dolphin.
Other studies on the impact of the Italian driftnet fishery confirm these high figures for cetacean by-catches, even pointing to the capture of species uncommon in Mediterranean waters, such as the Minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) (Di Natale and Mangano, 1981).
Other authors confirm that sperm whales are especially impacted by driftnets in the Mediterranean waters. A study of stranded animals found on Italian coasts (Nortarbartolo de Sciara, 1989, cited in Aguilar et al. , 1991) attributed the death of 24 sperm whales and 126 other cetaceans between 198689 to driftnets. 20 sperm whales had been recorded caught by Italian driftnet boats between 1978 and 1982 (Di Natale and Mangano, 1983), leading the authors to state that ‘the incidence of human activities on the mortality of the sperm whale in the Italian seas is very high’.
The high incidence of sperm whales stranded on the Spanish Iberian and Balearic coasts showing signs of entanglement in Italian driftnets (12 individuals from May 1993 to June 1994, most of them calves, of which only 3 could be released alive; University of Barcelona, 1995) suggests that this problem applies wherever driftnet fleets operate. The Italian driftnet fleets although important, are not the only ones operating in the Mediterranean, as described in some detail in section 2. 4 of this report. The relative impact of other poorly monitored fleets on cetacean populations is likely to be of a similar order. Minke whales are known to have been driftnet victims in North African waters (Ktari-Chakroun, 1980) and dolphins and perhaps even harbour porpoises are by-catch victims in current illegal driftnet fishing off Algeria (A. Nouar, pers. comm. ).
The Moroccan driftnet fleet probably has a very high impact on common and striped dolphin populations.
Whereas both species are particularly abundant in the Alboran Sea (Forcada and Hammond, 1998), the common dolphin population there is the most important in the whole of the western Mediterranean. North African waters are also the last home of the harbour 16 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats porpoise in the Mediterranean (excluding the Black Sea).
Silvani et al. (1999) reported on the Spanish driftnet fleet operating until 1994 in these Alboran Sea waters and their study is of particular interest given the absence of specific information on the incidental catches by the Moroccan fleet. The Spanish fleet was composed of 27 boat and worked in areas of high concentrations of both dolphin species.
Mortality for the two species combined was estimated at 366 individuals in 1993 and 289 in 1994, with approximately equal numbers for each species. Almost all were already dead when brought on board. The resulting by-catch rate of dolphins was 0. 1 individuals per km of net set per fishing operation. Most of the common dolphins caught were extremely young calves and the majority of striped dolphins were juveniles; less experienced younger animals are more likely to get entangled in driftnets than adults. Similar figures probably obtain for the important Moroccan driftnet fishery. Current mortality levels of striped dolphins in the Mediterranean have been considered potentially unsustainable by the International Whaling Commission (IWC, 1994).
Incidental catches of common dolphins in the Alboran Sea and Strait of Gibraltar may have caused a significant decline in numbers (Forcada and Hammond, 1998).
On the hand, the peculiar head shape of the sperm whale seems to make this species especially prone to entanglement in driftnets. The recorded or estimated rates of incidental catches are of special concern given its small Mediterranean population (probably a few hundred individuals).
Purse seines Fishing for bluefin tuna by local purse seine fleets in Mediterranean waters doesn’t, as a general rule, involve the practice of setting nets around cetaceans, in contrast to the well-known case of the yellowfin purse seine fishery in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean (Donahue and Edwards, 1996).
Subsequently, the information available for the Mediterranean seems to confirm that dolphins are not being massively caught in purse seine operations directed at tuna. Interviews with fishermen in the small Spanish tuna fleet in the Mediterranean, suggest very few dolphin catches (estimated at 6 individuals each year, all of them being released alive; University of Barcelona, 1995).
Fishermen from other fleets in the area, on the contrary, claim that dolphin catches by this tuna purse seine fleet are very important. Some reports point to occasional catches in other Mediterranean regions. Di Natale (1983a) reported the capture of 21 striped dolphins in two separate incidents in the Ligurian Sea involving tuna purse seine nets.
Magnaghi and Podesta (1987) reported another incidental capture of 8 striped dolphins in the same area, off San Remo in the Ligurian Sea. Tuna purse seiners have also been reported to catch pilot whales and other Delphinidae sporadically (Di Natale, 1990).
The activity of the more widespread purse seine fleets targeting small pelagic fish in the Mediterranean does not seem to lead to the high dolphin mortalities caused by driftnets (Silvani et al. , 1992; Di Natale, 1990), although Aguilar et al. (1991) described frequent accidental by-catches of common and stripped dolphins by purse seiners off the coasts of southern Spain, southern Italy and northern Africa.
The Spanish purse seine fleet targeting small pelagic species (sardine and anchovy) in the Alboran Sea appears to be especially impacting on dolphin populations: a field study conducted under an EU-funded project yielded a related estimated mortality of about 300 dolphins annually, the majority of them common dolphins (University of Barcelona, 1995).
This Spanish purse-seine fleet, however, may catch as many as 5,700 individuals annually, though the majority of them are released alive. This dolphin by-catch is exceptionally high in the context of Spanish purse seine fleets in the Mediterranean, exceptionality that has been explained by the disappearance or strong regression of common dolphins, the most abundant small cetacean in inshore waters, along the rest of the Spanish Mediterranean coast.
Striped dolphin, much less abundant than common dolphin in shelf waters, is less likely to interact with coastal fisheries, though estimations indicate that a further 100 striped dolphins might perish annually in the Spanish purse seine fishery in Catalonia and the Gulf of Lions (University of Barcelona, 1995).
17 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats Other gears A 5-year field survey in Italian waters around the Pontino Campano archipelago (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea) revealed that local cetacean populations interacted with several gears for trophic purposes (Mussi et al. , 1998).
Striped dolphins, Risso’s dolphins, long-finned pilot whales and sperm whales were observed taking advantage of the squid fishery using illuminated handlines, by preying on the squids attracted by the lights.
Striped and bottlenose dolphins also fed opportunistically around and in trawl nets, especially at the end of the haul. Bottlenose dolphins were also observed feeding on the bottom gill nets set by artisanal fishermen around the islands of Ventonene and Ischia, and inflicted large rips on them. Catalan fishermen report dolphins feeding around trawl nets and preying on fish caught in trammel nets. Reports on incidental captures point to the entanglement of sperm whales, Risso’s dolphins, common dolphins and bottlenose dolphins in artisanal fixed nets (gillnets and trammel nets) (Di Natale and Mangano, 1983; Di Natale, 1983bc; Duguy et al. , 1983b).
Duguy et al. efer to striped, common and bottlenose dolphins and a few fin whales incidentally caught by trawlers off France and Italy, and to striped dolphin, false killer whale (Pseudorca crassidens), Risso’s dolphin, and fin and sperm whale killed by surface longlines in Italian and Spanish waters. More recently, Mussi et al. (1998) referred to the case of another sperm whale found entangled in a surface longline in southern Tyrrhenian waters. The Spanish surface longline fleet operating in the Mediterranean is estimated to entangle between 12 to 32 cetaceans a year, mostly common and striped dolphins and pilot whales. With an estimated mortality rate of 10%, 1 to 3 individuals would be killed yearly (University of Barcelona, 1995).
Other less common gears might also involve the incidental capture of cetaceans, as shown by the sporadic records of killer whales entering tuna traps and then being killed by fishermen off southern Spain (University of Barcelona, 1995).
Di Natale and Mangano (1983) also reported the killing by explosives of a sperm whale in Italian waters. Other fishing-related interactions Human consumption of dolphin meat in the Mediterranean (as in some Italian and Spanish localities; Aguilar et al. , 1991) has been recorded, though it is far from being common or usual. Conversely, the deliberate killing of cetaceans, mostly dolphins, appears to be closely related to fisheries in one way or another.
Dolphins, especially the bottelnose dolphin, are considered as a pest by artisanal fishermen in many parts of the Mediterranean and blamed for the destruction of nets (gillnets or trammel nets) when preying on trapped fish. Aguilar et al. (1991) confirm that bottlenose dolphins often destroy trammel nets; Greek, Turkish (Cilician Basin) and Balearic smallscale fishermen are annoyed by the the costs associated with damage to gear caused by dolphins (Northridge and Pillery, 1985; Yediler and Gucu, 1997; M. Gazo, pers. comm. ).
The only significant conflict involving small-scale fisheries and dolphins along the entire Spanish Mediterranean coast is in the Balearic Islands, home to the largest bottlenose dolphin population in the region: important damage to trammel nets and gillnets has been reported.
An estimated 30 bottlenose dolphins die every year, most of them deliberately killed by Balearic fishermen (though a few deaths result from incidental entanglements), a rate that may not be sustainable given the reduced population there (estimated at only a few hundred) (University of Barcelona, 1995).
Fishermen have also killed large number of cetaceans in Malta (Aguilar et al. , 1991) and there are records of dolphins stranded in Italy showing signs of having been killed by fishermen (Anonymous, 1987).
Duguy et al. (1983b) reported that shooting was one of the main causes of common and bottlenose dolphin mortality in French waters, the latter being the most conflictive species. The use of dolphin meat as a bait for fishing gears, for example in the Andalusian ports of Garrucha and Algeciras, in the Alboran Sea (Aguilar et al. , 1991; University of Barcelona, 1995) is yet 18
The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats another fishing-related interaction that contributes to cetacean mortality. Dolphin meat appears to be particularly suitable for shrimp fishing with traps. An estimated 180-260 dolphins (common and striped) are killed illegally every year for this purpose (University of Barcelona, 1995).
Dynamite fishing, quite a common illegal practice in some places, inhibits the normal feeding behaviour of the bottlenose dolphin in Lebanese waters (Evans, 1987).
The use of dynamite in purse seine fishing (to push small pelagic shoals upwards) is currently practised off Algeria (A. Nouar, pers. comm. ) and probably in many other waters.
Conclusions The information available describes a wide variety of interactions between cetacean populations and fishing fleets in the Mediterranean, involving almost every kind of major fishing gears commonly in use. However, driftnet fisheries and, to a much lesser extent, small-scale fisheries using fixed nets and purse seine fisheries appear to account for the highest impact and are also responsible for the highest rates of direct human-induced marine mammal mortality. Driftnet fisheries are clearly inherently harmful to cetacean populations, and a major factor of direct mortality in Mediterranean waters. As described in detail in section 2. , an important international fleet still operates in the Mediterranean, although the current provisions of the United Nations, the European Union and the General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean call for the limitation or even the eradication of this fishing practice. The disappearance of driftnet fleets from the Mediterranean is the most desirable option, but even immediate short-term measures limiting this practice in the most sensitive areas would be useful interim measure. In 1999 the governments of France, Italy, and Monaco jointly declared the creation of a 100,000 sq. km whale sanctuary in the Ligurian Sea, the first example of an international marine protected area in the northern hemisphere. Driftnetting will be totally banned there in the near future. The Alboran Sea and the waters off north African coasts urgently need and would benefit from similar measures.
Their outstanding importance for cetacean populations (including the most important common dolphin population in the western Mediterranean), and the existence of rapidly growing driftnet fleets (whose impact is totally unknown), are reason enough for implementing precautionary conservation measures. Striped dolphin by-catches by Italian driftnets in Balearic waters, where the population appears to be low, are also a matter of concern, as is the current fishing-induced sperm whale mortality rate; this species particularly would benefit greatly from measures restricting driftnet fishing. Fishermen in small-scale fisheries need to be encouraged and motivated not to kill dolphins.
A pilot project on the use of acoustic devices or pingers to prevent dolphin predation from nets is about to begin in Balearic waters, organised by the University of Barcelona with the support of the Balearic government and fishermen associations (M. Gazo, pers. comm. ).
Overfishing here may increase the dolphin pressure on fishing nets as happens with the monk seal in Greek and Turkish waters. More systemic approaches focussed on the rebuilding of degraded ecosystems could benefit both fishermen and cetacean populations directly. Among other management measures, the effective enforcement of dynamite fishing banning, once more, appears to be necessary for the conservation of cetaceans (mostly dolphins) in some Mediterranean areas. Solutions to local conflicts, such as the putting an end to the illegal use of dolphin meat as bait in two Spanish ports, need immediate attention.
Adequate monitoring of the fleets in the recent rapidly growing Mediterranean tuna purse seine fishery is advisable to ensure that their activity doesn’t unduly affect dolphin populations. The most important fleets, such as the French one, responsible for massive tuna catches need watching most closely. The results of inquiries in the Spanish ports referred to above suggest that monitoring the activity of other Mediterranean purse seine fleets targeting small pelagic fish, especially in areas with important common dolphin populations, the species potentially more vulnerable to this fishery, 19 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats (i. e. hose operating in North African coasts) is necessary. The University of Barcelona (1995) has also pointed out that the potential impact of mid-water pelagic trawling for small pelagics on cetacean populations by a French fleet in the Gulf of Lions and in other Mediterranean areas (i. e. Italy) should be assessed. It is arguable whether the lack of significant interactions between cetaceans and fisheries in some Mediterranean regions is due to the very reduced populations there, or to low-impact fishing practices. Purse seine fleets have been reported as having a significant impact on the common dolphin in the western Mediterranean only in the Alboran Sea where the biggest population lives.
Conflicts between artisanal fisheries and bottlenose dolphins are also limited to areas with the highest populations of the species such as the Balearic waters. Conservation policies focusing on the recovery of cetacean populations should probably take into account the potential fishing interactions that might eventually emerge, thus simultaneously tackling the issue of responsible fisheries. Educational programmes for fishermen, focusing on building awareness of cetacean conservation and providing them with basic guidelines on how to reduce both cetacean by-catches and mortality are essential. 20 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats 1. 6.
The impact of fishing on seagrass beds Introduction Mediterranean seagrass beds are mostly constituted by the endemic angiosperm species Posidonia oceanica. This species inhabits large areas of coastal seabed down to depths of 40 m in optimal conditions and covers a total surface of about 20,000 square nautical miles, that is, 2% of the surface area of the littoral sea (Ardizzone et al. , 2000; Bethoux and Copin-Montegut, 1986).
Seagrass beds are spatially complex and biologically productive ecosystems that provide habitats and food resources for a diversified fish fauna and act as an important nursery area for many species (Harmelin-Vivien, 1982).
Red mullets (Mullus spp. are among the commercial species recruited in seagrasses, and are most abundant in summer and autumn, depending on the species (Jimenez et al. , 1997).
Meadows regress significantly for two main reasons, anthropic changes in sediment structure and composition, and the direct mechanical impact of fishing (Ardizzone et al. , 2000).
Bottom trawling has the most dramatic consequences on Posidonia, though other fishing practices such as dynamite fishing may also be destructive at a more local level. International concern about the conservation of this particular habitat led to the banning of trawling on seagrasses in EC waters (Regulation No 1626/94), and the listing and designation of Posidonia beds in Annex 1 of the EC Habitats Directive as special conservation areas.
Overview Trawling impacts on seagrass beds by both suspending sediments and directly damages vegetal mass. Sediment suspension affects macrophyte photosynthesis by decreasing light intensity. This is believed to have contributed to the disappearance of sea-grass meadows, and to affect fish recruitment and the quality of juvenile feeding areas in the Mediterranean Spanish coast (SanchezJerez and Ramos-Espla, 1996).
The quantification of the short-term impact of otter trawling on Posidonia beds has been extensively studied only in Murcia (south-eastern Spain), home to an important trawling fleet (Martin et al. , 1997; Jimenez et al. , 1997; Ramos Espla et al. , 1997).
Trawling is the main agent causing the degradation of deep seagrasses off this part of Spain, where up to 40% of the total Posidonia surface is highly damaged (Sanchez Lizaso et al. , 1990).
There, comparison of the structure of a Posidonia bed in a non-trawled area to that of a heavily fished one shows profound changes in the latter, where the surface area occupied by dead shoots was much higher than in the undisturbed seagrass 85. 2% and 5. 9% respectively. Experimental trawling hauls show that a medium-size typical trawler would root out an estimated 99,200 and 363,300 Posidonia shoots per hour in the disturbed and undisturbed areas respectively.
The mechanical impact of the gear was higher in the most degraded area, otter doors causing a continuous furrow on the bed because of the loss of complexity and consistency of the bottom. The relative effect of the gear thus in turn depends on the state of conservation of the grass. Whereas otter doors were responsible for rooting out 93% of Posidonia shoots in the healthiest seagrass, their contribution was limited to only 51% in the damaged area because the meadow there was also vulnerable to other parts of the gear. Differences in fish assemblages inhabiting healthy and disturbed Posidonia beds have been recorded and point to major changes in the structure of demersal communities caused by otter trawling. Whilst ichthyofauna typical of deeper detritic bottoms (Pagellus erythrinus, Triglidae,… or of sandy or muddy-sandy bottoms (Lithognathus mormyrus, Blenius ocellatus,… ) are found in the degraded seagrass, they seldom occur in a wellpreserved Posidonia bed. The contrary applies to some typical species inhabiting seagrasses (Labrus merula, Symphodus rostratus,… ) or hard bottoms (Muraena helena, Chromis chromis).
The 21 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats effects of trawling on the megabenthos in Posidonia beds are also very evident. These included the reduction or elimination of species typical of hard bottoms and their replacement by ubiquitous species and others typical of sandy/muddy bottoms, as a result of the sediments being enriched with finer particles.
Other effects were the increased numbers of active filter feeders and sedimentivorous species, such as solitary ascidians (Microcosmus spp. ) and holothurians, perhaps because of the raised concentration of organic matter in the water and sediment. The higher catch of macrobenthos in disturbed seagrasses could also reflect an increase in the vulnerability of benthos to trawling in the latter habitats. The negative effects of trawling on seagrasses have been confirmed by studies in other parts of the Mediterranean. Ardizzone et al. (2000) concluded that degradation of Posidonia beds in the Middle Tyrrhenian Sea, on the Italian coast, was caused by both increased water turbidity due to anthropic causes and bottom trawling, the latter affecting non-rocky, trawlable bottoms.
Seagrass beds in southern Tunisian waters are trawled for penaeid shrimps, whose early life stages are associated with this habitat (Caddy, 2000).
Dynamite fishing still occurs in some Mediterranean waters and is not good news for seagrass beds. Although strictly prohibited in Algeria, it is practised close to the shore at shallow depths (0-10 m) (A. Nouar, pers. comm. ).
Poacher fishermen target salema (Sarpa salpa) shoals and cause extensive damage to rocky bottoms and coastal seagrass beds. The negative physical impact of the above reported fishing practices aside, the fishing of seagrass communities significantly affects trophic webs and, therefore, ecosystem structure and function.
Comparison between fished and protected Posidonia beds in France and Italy, indeed, pointed to a decrease in top predators, mainly Scorpaenidae and Serranidae feeding on fish and large crustaceans, and to a parallel increase in mesocarnivores (Labridae), probably because of the lower predation pressure of the former, more susceptible to fishing (Harmelin-Vivien, 2000).
The decrease in the mean weight, density and biomass of fish in the exploited seagrass, as well as the higher indices of animal diversity found in the reserves have been reported in several studies (Buia et al. , 1999; Harmelin-Vivien, 2000; Francour, 1999).
Conclusions Many of the studies referred to above found a direct relationship between the health of the seagrass ecosystem and the level of effective protection. Most of them also point to its important ecological function and its vulnerability to physical damage and the fishing mortality associated with human exploitation.
Seagrasses must therefore be protected from bottom trawling and other destructive practices, and fishing pressure reduced as much as possible; current regulations banning trawling on Posidonia beds in most Mediterranean coastal areas need to be enforced and greater areas of seagrasses included in marine protected areas totally closed to fishing. Campaigns to build awareness together with effective monitoring and surveillance are other useful tools. Additional technical measures such as the deployment of artificial reefs (if justified) could offer further protection. 22 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats 1. 7. The impact of fishing on the seabed (soft and hard bottoms) and its associated benthic communities Introduction Seagrasses are exceptional seabed bottoms.
The vast majority of Mediterranean seabed surfaces lack such a massive vegetal cover and are muddy, sandy or, in some places, rocky. These apparently modest habitats, far from being lifeless, are inhabited by complex biological communities, often part of fragile ecosystems. Current fishing practices, notably trawling on seabed sediments, profoundly disturb the physical support system and undermine the structure and functioning of the benthic ecosystem. Overview Soft and hard bottom habitats are fished differently, the effects of fishing on them are different and the information available distinguishes between them: they are therefore described separately below.
Soft bottoms Heavy fishing disturbs muddy and sandy bottoms, causing dramatic changes in the structure of both the physical support system and the related biological assemblages. As synthesised by Pranovi et al. (2000), ‘trawls and dredges scrape or plough the seabed, resuspend sediment, change grain size and sediment texture, destroy bedforms, and remove or scatter non-target species’. To these effects can be added the increase in the amount of suspended nutrients and organic matter (Jones, 1992).
Highly impacting bottom fishing (trawling, dredging,…) mainly affects shelf areas. In the Mediterranean basin deep trawling fisheries targeting Norway lobster or red shrimps also affects slope muddy bottoms.
In general, muddy sediments, which form in high depositional areas with low external disturbance, are much more sensitive to trawling disturbance than more dynamic coarser sediments; trawl doors penetrate them more deeply than other sediments, with potentially greater effects on infaunal species (Ball et al. , 2000).
An Italian fleet with hydraulic dredges, otter and ‘rapido’ trawls (Ardizzone, 1994) exploits a large trawlable shelf area in the north-western Adriatic. The latter gear is similar to the beam trawl, and is used in the Adriatic for fishing scallops in sandy offshore areas and flatfish in muddy inshore areas, though it also catches small fish (Pranovi et al. , 2000; Giovanardi et al. , 1998).
The study carried out by Pranovi et al. 2000) on the short-term impact of this gear on the sea bottom revealed that it causes extensive damage, digging and furrowing the sediment to a depth of 6 cm. Negative effects on the structure of the macrobenthos community were recorded: these included the increase in the abundance and biomass of taxa a week after the perturbation because of the increase in the trophic availability benefiting a few oportunistic scavenger species. Commercial exploitation appears to result in cumulative disturbance as evidenced by the higher biomass of scavenger Crustacea and Echinodermata at the expense of Porifera, Mollusca and Annelida. Commercial fishing may therefore be selecting epibenthic species most able to cope with physical disturbance by gear and endure the discard process.
Experimental studies seem to conclude that ‘rapido’ trawling causes greater short-term disturbance on macrobenthos in muddy areas than in sandy bottoms, although short-lived fauna associated with the former recovers quite rapidly (within two weeks) (Pranovi et al. , 1998).
Bottom fishing has deeply affected some Mediterranean invertebrate species, the endemic sponge Axinella cannabina or the bryozoan Hornera lichenoides (De Ambrosio, 1998).
Otter trawling fisheries on muddy bottoms targeting shrimp Parapenaeus longirostris in Algeria destroy the benthic communitiy associated with the seapen (Funiculina quadrangularis, Anthozoa) (A. Nouar, 23 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats pers. comm. ).
The hydraulic dredge (known in Italian as ‘cannellara’), which ploughs sediment to a depth of 20-30 cm is particularly destructive (Relini et al. , 1999).
This fishing practice is especially common in the Adriatic Sea (50 boats in Monfalcone, Venice and Chioggia) and takes shelled molluscs such as the sword razor shell (Ensis minor), smooth callista (Callista chione), the striped venus (Chamelea gallina) and the golden carpet shell (Paphia aurea).
The use of hydraulic dredges to catch warty venus (Venus verrucosa), a species inhabiting detritic, conchiferous or sandy bottoms and Posidonia beds, was banned in Italy in 1992 because of the extensive damage it inflicted.
In the south-western Adriatic, the smooth scallop (Chlamys glabra) fishery operating on coastal detritic bottoms inside the Gulf of Manfredonia makes big discards–395 kg from only an hour’s dredging-principally of green sea urchins (Psammechinus microtuberculatus), molluscs and crustaceans (Vaccarella et al. , 1998).
Deep slope fisheries targeting high value crustacean species operate out of Spain, Italy, Algeria and Tunisia, fishing down to a depth of 1000 m depth in the north-western Mediterranean red shrimp (Aristeus antennatus and Aristeomorpha foliacea) fishery. Although there is no information on the effects of deep sea trawling on muddy bottoms in the Mediterranean (or anywhere else in the world), the few authors touching on the subject warn of the extreme vulnerability of such sea beds to physical perturbations.
It appears that recovery rates are much slower and the impacts of trawling may be very long lasting (many years or even decades) in deep water, where the fauna is less adaptable to changes in sediment regimes and external disturbances (Jones, 1992; Ball et al. , 2000).
Otter trawling in red shrimp grounds is injurious to the Isidella elongata facies of the bathyal mud biocenosis. This octocorallian species is very much affected by fishing (A. Nouar, pers. comm. ; Sarda, 1997).
The ecosystem effects related to the use of bottom gears may extend far beyond the direct, straightforward impacts discussed above. Eutrophic processes may be enhanced leading to hypoxia in sensitive soft bottom areas (as in the northern Adriatic) and the quantity of hydrogen sulphide released from sediments may increase (Caddy, 2000).
The anthropic re-suspension of sediment enriched in organic matter can eliminate macrophyte, benthos and demersal fish approaching their hypoxia tolerance limit; the changed ecosystem structure favours species adapted or tolerant to hypoxic conditions. Trawling and dredging can also play a role affecting the intensity and duration of naturally occurring seasonal hypoxic crises in some places. These fishing practices, carried out in hypoxic conditions in the Adriatic, can exacerbate the summer killings of young shellfish. Trawling can also remove large-bodied, long-lived macrobenthic species and subsequenty reduce the bioturbation zone (Ball et al. , 2000).
This could increase the danger of eutrophication and result in longer recovery rates (Rumohr et al. , 1996).
On the other hand, studies carried out on muddy seabeds off the Catalan coast (north-western Mediterranean) showed that otter trawling operations produce short-term changes in the biomass of taxa within the trawled area. Some pointed to simple depletion caused by the gear catch (i. e. the cases of Scyliorhinnus canicula and Merluccius merluccius) and others to the concentration of scavenging species (i. e. Arnoglossus laterna, Cepola rubescens, Squilla mantis, Liocarcinus depurator) attracted by an increased food supply as a result of the mechanical killing of benthic fauna (Demestre et al. , 2000).
This typical of scavenger response lasted only about four days.
These results suggest that fishing disturbance may cause shifts in the benthic community structure that particularly affect mobile scavenging species, probably the most food-limited group in muddy seabed environments. 24 The impact of fishing on vulnerable groups and habitats Hard bottoms There is little information on the impact of anthropogenic disturbance on Mediterranean sub-tidal hard bottoms. These systems are characterised by high habitat complexity and, consequently, high biodiversity indices. Fraschetti et al. (1999) conducted a field survey off the Apulian coast (southeastern Italy), an area with a large rocky surface, aiming at correlating spatial biodiversity with damage derived from date mussel (Lithofaga lithophaga) fisheries, based on the demolition of substrates by commercial divers.
Signs of damage–a high degree of desertification–were detected in all zones; the high spatial heterogeneity shown by natural communities was taken as a potential symptom of stress, and related to intensive date mussel harvesting practices. Desertification of long stretches of rocky shores is caused by destruction of habitats and the associated communities, combined with grazing by sea urchins (Fanelli et al. , 1994).
Other destructive fishing practices are also locally important in some areas. Illegal dynamite fishing along the entire Algerian coast affects rocky bottoms down to a depth of 10 m (A. Nouar, pers. comm. ).
The St Andrew Cross, an iron bar hung with chains, used for harvesting coral (Corallium rubrum) is a well-known and highly destructive gear deployed on Mediterranean rocky bottoms.
Since being banned in EU waters in 1994 (Council Regulation No 1626/94), it has been abandoned in many places in favour of divers who cause more localised impact on rock epifauna (Caddy, 2000).
Standard otter trawling also harms rocky bottoms thanks to special rolling devices that prevent the gear from being damaged. This happens off north-western Spain in rocky fishing grounds rich in sparid fish, is spite of being legally banned. Conclusions The impact of fishing on the seabed concerns mostly the use of bottom trawling gears, namely otter trawls, beam trawls and dredges, together with some aggressive practices affecting rocky bottoms such as dynamite fishing and fishing for coral and date mussels.
Although it is clear that the latter should be minimised, given the documented damage they cause to seabed bottoms and benthic communities, an ecosystem-based management of the former is difficult since their harmful effects are inherent in their use. The creation of networks of marine reserves totally closed to bottom trawling could help to rebuild degraded benthic communities in adjacent fished areas in the future. Seasonal rotation of fishing grounds through establishing temporal closures could benefit bottoms too since the likelihood of permanent change in bottom communities is proportional to the frequency of gear disturbance, as pointed out by Jones (1992).
Ecosystem changes, in any case, should be avoided and the effect of fishing on bottoms and associated communities should be strictly monitored. Bottom trawling in eutrophic areas, prone to anoxia, is a matter of special concern: fishing practices should be significantly limited, at least in the most critical areas and/or seasons. The ecosystem effects of trawling on deep muddy bottoms, i. e. in red shrimp or Norway lobster fisheries, also deserves special attention given the high vulnerability of deep muddy bottom communities to external perturbations. 25 Gears and fleets of special interest regarding fishing impacts in the Mediterranean 2. Gears and fleets of special interest with respect to fishing impacts in Mediterranean waters 2. 1.
The ecosystem impact of bottom trawling Introduction Bottom trawling fleets predominate in many Mediterranean fisheries, being responsible for a high share of total catches and, in many cases, yielding the highest earnings among all the fishing subsectors. The high profitability of this fishing practice is largely due to its low selectivity with respect to sizes and species caught, and to the high harvests generated. Trawlers have dramatic effects on the ecosystem including physical damage to the seabed and the degradation of associated communities, the overfishing of demersal resources, and the changes in the structure and functioning of marine ecosystems derived from the depletion of populations and the huge amount of by-catches and associated discards.
Overview Whilst the problems related to the impact of bottom trawling on Posidonia beds and soft bottoms have been dealt with elsewhere in this report, the present section focuses on the ecosystem effects of trawling derived from its low selectivity and the issues relating to the capture of undersized individuals and discarding. By-catches (and subsequent discards) of particularly vulnerable species or groups are covered in other parts of this report, as are the effects of trawl discards on marine seabird populations. The ecosystem effects of discards reported below refer to demersal communities. Size selectivity on commercial species Bottom trawling fisheries in the Mediterranean are essentially multispecies.
Monospecific fisheries are very rare and are largely limited to deep shrimp fisheries on muddy slope bottoms. The high marketability of small fish in many countries encourages the targeting of the juvenile fraction of some species, often in violation of laws regarding minimum sizes. Demersal populations are consequently overfished, shallow areas (within the 3-mile coastal limit or on bottoms less than 50 m deep, depending on the country) are illegally trawled and small, illegal mesh sizes are used. Examples are widespread throughout the Mediterranean and are not detailed here since they mostly concern recurring issues related to classical fisheries management.
The well-known massive seasonal harvest of undersized red mullet, which are caught on shallow grounds when they settle, is though worth mentioning. The paradigmatic case of the hake fishery using bottom longlines and otter trawling gears in the Gulf of Lions also deserves highlighting. Data from the late 80’s clearly showed that the trawling fishery exploited the juvenile fraction of the population since the mean size of catches was only 17. 9 cm, which strongly contrasted with the 48. 2 cm corresponding to longline catches (Lleonart, 1990).
Quantification of discarding in Mediterranean bottom trawl fisheries Information on discards in Mediterranean trawl fisheries confirm the magnitude of the problem, though hey vary considerably in amount and composition depending on region, boat size, season, bottom type and depth of the exploited ground. The first regional study addressing the magnitude of discards in the western Mediterranean involved the monitoring of fishing fleets in 7 ports (6 Spanish and 1 Italian).
Combined data gave discard estimations ranging from 23-67% of total catch in bottoms less than 150 m deep, 13-62% in bottoms 150 to 350 m deep and 14-43% in slope 26 Gears and fleets of special interest regarding fishing impacts in the Mediterranean bottoms deeper than 350 m (Carbonell, 1997; Carbonell et al. , 1998).
Data from a single locality, the Catalan port of Vilanova i la Geltru (north-west Mediterranean), illustrate this high quantitative variability.
Monitoring of the fleet there revealed that the annual average of discards ranged between 13% and 39% of the total catch for small boats (< 150 hp) and between 17% and 48% for larger boats (> 150 hp), depending on the depths exploited. The amount discarded, however, peaked at 75. 4% and 66. 6%, respectively, in the case of larger boats operating in spring and smaller ones operating in the summer on shelf bottoms (< 150-m depth).
Similar high discard levels have been reported for other Mediterranean trawl fisheries. Total annual discards in Sicily during the 80’s were estimated at around 70,000 t, accounting for an average of 44-72% of catches (Charbonnier, 1990).
The monitoring of fleets operating in three major Greek fishing grounds (Ionian Sea, Cyclades Islands and Thracian Sea) during 1988-97 yielded discard estimations of 40%, 55% and 25% of the total catch of fish, crustaceans and cephalopods, respectively (Machias et al. , 1999).
Field studies carried out in 1995 showed that the fraction discarded by the trawl fleet operating in the Cyclades area, in the Aegean Sea, amounted to 59% of the total catch in bottoms less than 150 m deep, 63% in bottoms 150-200 m deep, and 37% in grounds deeper than 300m (Vassilopoulou and Papaconstantinou, 1998).
On the whole, discards in the Hellenic commercial trawl fishery are estimated to account for 45% of total catch (Stergiou et al. , 1998).
The ‘rapido’ beam trawler fleet (56 units) based in Chioggia in the Adriatic Sea produces qualitatively heterogeneous discards depending on the species target.
Whilst pectinid fishing involves the exploitation of sandy bottoms offshore and discards consist of echinoderms (32% in weight), crustaceans (26%), molluscs (23%) and porifers (15%), flatfish fishing is carried out on muddy coastal areas, where molluscs and crustaceans account for the bulk of discards (60% and 30%, respectively).
High discard levels are also common in the case of Mediterranean deep sea trawling fisheries. Discards by the trawling fleet operating on the upper slope (230-611 m) off Alacant (south-east Spain) have been estimated at 34. 6% of the total catch (Soriano and Sanchez-Lizaso, 2000).
The low selectivity of trawling is highlighted by data from this fishery showing that up to 95 species are taken; only 12 of these account for nearly 89% of the total, and 89 of them are discarded.
The analysis of discards in the Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus) and red shimp (Aristeus antennatus) fisheries at 280-720 m in the Balearic Islands (western Mediterranean), estimated at an average of 42% of the total catch, led the authors to conclude that ‘an important fraction of the catch of the 2 deep-sea decapod crustacean fisheries of the Western Mediterranean is discarded’ (Moranta et al. , 2000).
Longer tows, to compensate for the reduced biomass, seem to result in lower selectivity by the mesh and higher discard rates. Discarding can also involve important commercial species, especially smallest size classes. Discards of commercial species in Greek waters are reported to range from 0% for red mullet (Mullus surmuletus) to 10% for hake (Merluccius merluccius) and shrimp Parapenaeus longirostris (Machias et al. , 1999).
The bulk of discards (66%) in the Balearic deep sea crustacean fisheries at a depth of 300 m referred to above correspond to undersized marketable species. The study of hake discards (Merluccius merluccius), forkbeard (Phycis blenoides) and poor cod (Trisopterus minutus capelanus) in the trawl fishery of the northern Tyrrhenian Sea revealed that they can reach high levels, depending on the species, the season and the depth exploited (Sartor et al. , 1999).
Maximum estimates of discards were 34. 1% of total catch (in weight) for hake, 41% for forkbeard and 39% for poor cod, whereas total annual mean discards in the traditional trawl fishery amounted to 39%, 65% and 57% respectively in numbers of individuals. All individuals under 10 cm are discarded in all three species. Although a roportion of discards in Mediterranean trawling fisheries may survive, few helpful data on which to base quantitative estimates exist. Observations derived from experiments on aquaria carried out on board point to the low mortality of crustaceans caught as a by-catch in Catalan trawl 27 Gears and fleets of special interest regarding fishing impacts in the Mediterranean fisheries, whereas survival rates of fish are highly heterogeneous and vary strongly according to the species (i. e. 0% for Trachurus spp. and 100% in Scyliorhinus canicula) (Sanchez, 2000).
Another study of by-catch survival in the ‘rapido’ fleet operating in the northern Adriatic showed low mortality in all taxa examined during the three to four hours following capture (Pranovi et al. , 1999).
Impact of discards on demersal ecosystems The impact of discards goes far beyond single-species demographic effects, since discarded biomass can alter ecosystem structure by favouring scavengers (Moranta et al. , 2000).
The consequences of the fishing-driven increase in food supply stemming from have seldom been addressed by specific studies. The only work dealing with this issue in the Mediterranean is based on photographic surveys carried out off the Catalan coast in the north-western Mediterranean, and focuses on the estimation of the consumption rate of fishery discards by scavengers (Bozzano and Sarda, submitted).
The study used a baited camera, which was set on the sea floor at a depth of 100 and 300 m in two areas subjected to trawling with continual discards. fish and 9 crustacean species were recorded feeding on the baits, and the benthic snake eel Ophicthus rufus was the main scavenger species, followed by isopods (i. e. Cyrolana borealis) and amphipods (i. e. Schopelocheirus hopei).
Sporadic scavenging behaviour was even reported for common fish species such as Spicara spp. and Trachurus spp. Discarded material seems to enter demersal food webs quite quickly, as suggested by the high consumption rates recorded. In all cases baits were fully consumed within 24 hours, and consumption rates reached maximum levels in deep bottoms at night. The authors concluded that the prevalence of O. rufus indicated an environment dominated by a monospecific scavenger guild, whose competitors and predators have probably been eliminated by fishing activity.
This conclusion is particularly interesting since it highlights the multiple effects of fishing on complex systems such are communities and ecosystems: fishing can favour a single species within the demersal ecosystem by both removing its competitors and independently increasing its food availability through discards. Conclusions There is compelling evidence that discards by Mediterranean unselective trawling fleets are significant. The effect on marine communities is twofold: at a single-species level, the population dynamics of a species are altered, and at the ecosystem level profound changes occur because of the disruption of food webs. Ecosystem modifications are triggered by the change in the biomass and demographic structure of the different species as well as by the increasing food supply for scavenger and opportunistic species.
It is worth noting that the latter can result in the trophic connection of separate sub-systems (i. e. pelagic and benthic), making ecosystem consequences even more dramatic. Although bottom trawling is inherently rather unselective, by-catches and discards can be minimised. Trawling can be limited and technical measures can be introduced to improve selectivity. Trawl selectivity within an area depends on many factors, ranging from the depth exploited or the kind of bottom, to the season. Most impacting scenarios could be avoided by restricting trawling both spatially and temporally. In this context, current provisions banning trawling in coastal waters less than 50 m deep or 3 miles offshore should be enforced effectively.
Trawling gears could be made more selective by using higher mesh sizes or incorporating special excluding devices, such as those based on rigid grids. The former solution may be difficult to apply in Mediterranean waters for social and political reasons, but the development and compulsory use of excluding devices increasing selectivity (such as those in use in some North Atlantic waters) deserve attention. Alternatively, the use of a square mesh can also improve selectivity. It is 28 Gears and fleets of special interest regarding fishing impacts in the Mediterranean convenient to mention here that shorter trawling hauls are known to reduce discard rates (Stergiou et al. , 1998, Moranta et al. , 2000).
Partial olutions and technical improvements notwithstanding, the banning of bottom trawling in large marine protected areas throughout the Mediterranean Basin appears to be the only way of maintaining a sample set of demersal ecosystems free of the damage caused by this widespread fishing practice. These areas would moreover be very useful as a basic reference guide to healthy bottom communities in the context of a future ecosystem-based management of Mediterranean fisheries. 2. 2. The impact of longlining on large pelagic populations Introduction Pelagic longlining in Mediterranean waters inflicts considerable mortality on elasmobranchs, marine turtles and seabirds taken as by-catch or even (in the case of the former) target species. It is obvious, however, that large pelagics, the objective of this fishery, is the group most impacted by this gear.
The main species targeted in the Mediterranean are swordfish (Xiphias gladius), bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) and to a lesser extent, albacore (Thunnus alalunga); the two former are listed as endangered species in the 1996 IUCN Red List. Bluefin tuna and swordfish are also exceptional in the Mediterranean context for being the only species whose populations are subjected to an international TAC-based management regime. The overall issue of the sustainable management of their populations is beyond the scope of this report, and the discussion below focuses instead on the selectivity of surface longline fisheries operating in Mediterranean waters as it affects the immature, small-sized fraction of their dwindling populations and the degree of compliance with current international legislation.
Overview Brief summary of the main fleets and fishing grounds A variety of medium-scale and industrial pelagic longlining fleets operate in Mediterranean waters, ranging from local coastal state fleets to large industrial foreign fleets, whether Japanese, flag of convenience (FoC), or even unflagged ‘pirate’ fleets. FoC and pirate fleets are estimated at about 100 units (GFCM, 1997).
Surface longline gears, including those used by local Mediterranean fleets, are deployed in large areas since line lengths of 50-60 km (bearing several thousand hooks) are not rare. Longline fleets in quest of their highly migratory target fish species, even local ones, are highly mobile, covering virtually the whole Mediterranean basin. A significant share of catches is taken in international waters, more than 12 miles offshore. The Spanish longline fleet operates from the Strait of Gibraltar (5? W) to 7? E near Sardinia, and