Response of benthic fauna to experimental bottom fishing: a global meta-analysis
Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolyn › Erthygl › adolygiad gan gymheiriaid
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Yn: Fish and Fisheries, Cyfrol 19, Rhif 4, 07.2018, t. 698-715.
Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolyn › Erthygl › adolygiad gan gymheiriaid
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T1 - Response of benthic fauna to experimental bottom fishing
T2 - a global meta-analysis
AU - Sciberras, Marija
AU - Hiddink, Jan Geert
AU - Jennings, Simon
AU - Szostek, Claire L
AU - Hughes, Kathryn M
AU - Kneafsey, Brian
AU - Clarke, Leo
AU - Ellis, Nick
AU - Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D
AU - McConnaughey, Robert A
AU - Hilborn, Ray
AU - Collie, Jeremy S
AU - Pitcher, Roland
AU - Amoroso, Ricardo O
AU - Parma, Ana M
AU - Suuronen, Petri
AU - Kaiser, Michel J
N1 - The study was funded by David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Walton Family Foundation, The Alaska Seafood Cooperative, American Seafoods Group US, Blumar Seafoods Denmark, Clearwater Seafoods, Espersen Group, Glacier Fish Company LLC US, Gortons Inc., Independent Fisheries Limited N.Z., Nippon Suisan (USA), Inc., Pacific Andes International Holdings, Ltd., Pesca Chile, S.A., San Arawa, S.A., Sanford Ltd. N.Z., Sealord Group Ltd. N.Z., South African Trawling Association and Trident Seafoods. Additional funding to individual authors was provided by the UK Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (project MF1225); Natural Environment Research Council and Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (grant number NE/L003279/1); Marine Ecosystems Research Programme; the European Union (project BENTHIS EU‐FP7 312088), the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (RAM). The International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) Science Fund, the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the UN.
PY - 2018/7
Y1 - 2018/7
N2 - Bottom-contact fishing gears are globally the most wide-spread anthropogenic sources of direct disturbance to the seabed and associated biota. Managing these fishing disturbances requires quantification of gear impacts on biota and the rate of recovery following disturbance. We undertook a systematic review and meta-analysis of 122 experiments on the effects-of-bottom fishing to quantify the removal of benthos in the path of the fishing gear and to estimate rates of recovery following disturbance. A gear pass reduced benthic invertebrate abundance by 26% and species richness by 19%. The effect was strongly gear-specific, with gears that penetrate deeper into the sediment having a significantly larger impact than those that penetrate less. Sediment composition (% mud and presence of biogenic habitat) and the history of fishing disturbance prior to an experimental fishing event were also important predictors of depletion, with communities in areas that were not previously fished, predominantly muddy or biogenic habitats being more strongly affected by fishing. Sessile and low mobility biota with longer life-spans such as sponges, soft corals and bivalves took much longer to recover after fishing (> 3 yr) than mobile biota with shorter life-spans such as polychaetes and malacostracans (<1 yr). This meta-analysis provides insights into the dynamics of recovery. Our estimates of depletion along with estimates of recovery rates and large-scale, high-resolution maps of fishing frequency and habitat will support more rigorous assessment of the environmental impacts of bottom-contact gears, thus supporting better informed choices in trade-offs between environmental impacts and fish production.
AB - Bottom-contact fishing gears are globally the most wide-spread anthropogenic sources of direct disturbance to the seabed and associated biota. Managing these fishing disturbances requires quantification of gear impacts on biota and the rate of recovery following disturbance. We undertook a systematic review and meta-analysis of 122 experiments on the effects-of-bottom fishing to quantify the removal of benthos in the path of the fishing gear and to estimate rates of recovery following disturbance. A gear pass reduced benthic invertebrate abundance by 26% and species richness by 19%. The effect was strongly gear-specific, with gears that penetrate deeper into the sediment having a significantly larger impact than those that penetrate less. Sediment composition (% mud and presence of biogenic habitat) and the history of fishing disturbance prior to an experimental fishing event were also important predictors of depletion, with communities in areas that were not previously fished, predominantly muddy or biogenic habitats being more strongly affected by fishing. Sessile and low mobility biota with longer life-spans such as sponges, soft corals and bivalves took much longer to recover after fishing (> 3 yr) than mobile biota with shorter life-spans such as polychaetes and malacostracans (<1 yr). This meta-analysis provides insights into the dynamics of recovery. Our estimates of depletion along with estimates of recovery rates and large-scale, high-resolution maps of fishing frequency and habitat will support more rigorous assessment of the environmental impacts of bottom-contact gears, thus supporting better informed choices in trade-offs between environmental impacts and fish production.
U2 - 10.1111/faf.12283
DO - 10.1111/faf.12283
M3 - Article
VL - 19
SP - 698
EP - 715
JO - Fish and Fisheries
JF - Fish and Fisheries
SN - 1467-2960
IS - 4
ER -