Predicting the population-level impact of mitigating harbor porpoise bycatch with pingers and time-area fishing closures
Authored by Jacob Nabe-Nielsen, Francois Bastardie, Beest Floris M van, Lotte Kindt-Larsen, Valerio Bartolino
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.1785
Sponsors:
European Union
Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development (FORMAS)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://zenodo.org/record/53097#.XIU7IYWcEsk
Abstract
Unintentional mortality of higher trophic-level species in commercial
fisheries (bycatch) represents a major conservation concern as it may
influence the long-term persistence of populations. An increasingly
common strategy to mitigate bycatch of harbor porpoises (Phocoena
phocoena), a small and protected marine top predator, involves the use
of pingers (acoustic alarms that emit underwater noise) and time-area
fishing closures. Although these mitigation measures can reduce harbor
porpoise bycatch in gillnet fisheries considerably, inference about the
long-term population-level consequences is currently lacking. We
developed a spatially explicit individual-based simulation model (IBM)
with the aim to evaluate the effectiveness of these two bycatch
mitigation measures. We quantified both the direct positive effects
(i.e., reduced bycatch) and any indirect negative effects (i.e., reduced
foraging efficiency) on the population size using the inner Danish
waters as a biological system. The model incorporated empirical data on
gillnet fishing effort and noise avoidance behavior by free-ranging
harbor porpoises exposed to randomized high-frequency (20- to 160-kHz)
pinger signals. The IBM simulations revealed a synergistic relationship
between the implementation of time-area fishing closures and pinger
deployment. Time-area fishing closures reduced bycatch rates
substantially but not completely. In contrast, widespread pinger
deployment resulted in total mitigation of bycatch but frequent and
recurrent noise avoidance behavior in high-quality foraging habitat
negatively affected individual survival and the total population size.
When both bycatch mitigation measures were implemented simultaneously,
the negative impact of pinger noise-induced sub-lethal behavioral
effects on the population was largely eliminated with a positive effect
on the population size that was larger than when the mitigation measures
were used independently. Our study highlights that conservationists and
policy makers need to consider and balance both the direct and indirect
effects of harbor porpoise bycatch mitigation measures before enforcing
their widespread implementation. Individual-based simulation models,
such as the one presented here, offer an efficient and dynamic framework
to evaluate the impact of human activities on the long-term survival of
marine populations and can serve as a basis to design adaptive
management strategies that satisfy both ecological and socioeconomic
demands on marine ecosystems.
Tags
Agent-based model
models
noise
Conservation
Phocoena phocoena
Behavioral-responses
Disturbance
Marine
Phocoena-phocoena
Underwater noise
Marine mammals
Cetaceans
Bycatch
Population
dynamics
Acoustic alarms
Gillnet fisheries
Time-area fishing closures
By-catch
Longline fishery