Conservation Letters (Mar 2024)

Bycatch in drift gillnet fisheries: A sink for Indian Ocean cetaceans

  • Brianna Elliott,
  • Jeremy J. Kiszka,
  • Sylvain Bonhommeau,
  • Umair Shahid,
  • Rebecca Lent,
  • Lauren Nelson,
  • Andrew J. Read

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12997
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract In 1992, the UN banned the use of large‐scale pelagic driftnets on the high seas (UNGA Resolution 46/215). Three decades later, however, drift gillnets remain one of the primary fishing gears in the Indian Ocean, accounting for approximately 30% of tuna catches in this ocean. Recent estimates indicate that several million small cetaceans have been killed in Indian Ocean gillnets over the past few decades. National agencies and the regional fisheries management organization charged with managing tuna fisheries, the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission, have yet to effectively document the bycatch of small cetaceans in these fisheries. Here, we review current information on cetacean bycatch in Indian Ocean drift gillnets and propose potential solutions to this important conservation issue.

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