2011
DOI: 10.1051/alr/2011007
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Productivity and susceptibility analysis for species caught in Atlantic tuna fisheries

Abstract: -Ecological risk assessment is a useful methodology for assisting the management of fisheries from an ecosystem perspective. Atlantic tuna fisheries, managed by the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), are economically important and interact with several bycatch species. In spite of these interactions, no comprehensive ecological risk assessment has been conducted for bycatch species caught in ICCAT fisheries. In this paper, we followed a two stage approach with the objectiv… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(36 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
(28 reference statements)
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“…Bycatch ratios observed in some fisheries suggest that globally, the bycatch by longlines of bony fish and shark species is much higher than by DFAD purse seine fisheries (Stevens 1992;Harrington et al 2005;Kelleher 2005;Mejuto et al 2006). While the potential ecological dangers arising from the use of DFADs in purse seine fisheries are more visible because of observer programs implemented in all tuna-RFMOs, they are surely much lower than the environmental risks exerted by longliners (Arrizabalaga et al 2011). The same conclusion stands for some unobserved fisheries, such as the large-scale driftnet fisheries of the Indian Ocean that annually catch ∼500 000 t of tuna and likely produce large undeclared bycatch of sharks, turtles, and marine mammals (IOTC 2012).…”
Section: Increased Bycatch Due To Dfad Fishing?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bycatch ratios observed in some fisheries suggest that globally, the bycatch by longlines of bony fish and shark species is much higher than by DFAD purse seine fisheries (Stevens 1992;Harrington et al 2005;Kelleher 2005;Mejuto et al 2006). While the potential ecological dangers arising from the use of DFADs in purse seine fisheries are more visible because of observer programs implemented in all tuna-RFMOs, they are surely much lower than the environmental risks exerted by longliners (Arrizabalaga et al 2011). The same conclusion stands for some unobserved fisheries, such as the large-scale driftnet fisheries of the Indian Ocean that annually catch ∼500 000 t of tuna and likely produce large undeclared bycatch of sharks, turtles, and marine mammals (IOTC 2012).…”
Section: Increased Bycatch Due To Dfad Fishing?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One approach to move towards quantitative assessments with limited data is the use of ecological risk assessments (ERAs) (see Cortés et al 2010, Arrizabalaga et al 2011, Hobday et al 2011 to identify populations at risk and fisheries of concern. ERAs combine biological productivity analysis with susceptibility analysis to assess the likelihood of a population being impacted by threats such as direct or incidental capture.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cortés et al (2010) conducted an Ecological Risk Assessment (ERA) for eleven pelagic elasmobranch species in the Atlantic Ocean, and determined their relative productivity/susceptibility in order to rank and compare the vulnerability of the species caught in the fishery. More recently, Arrizabalaga et al (2011) carried out an ERA analysis that included all bycatch groups captured in pelagic longline tuna fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean. One parameter that can be used and included in such types of assessment (in the susceptibility component of the analysis) is the probability of survival after capture, which can be partially inferred from the proportions of species-specific hooking mortality.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%