Fishermen caught and killed about 1 percent
of the world’s waved albatrosses in a year,
according to a new study by Wake Forest
University biologists.
“If that happens every year, that is not
sustainable,” said Jill Awkerman, a Wake Forest
graduate student who is the lead author of the
study published online Sept. 26 in the journal
Biological Conservation. “In a matter of
decades, you could be talking about
extinction.”
Awkerman’s research shows the waved
albatrosses are unintentionally killed when
caught in fishing nets or on fishing hooks, but
are also intentionally harvested for human
consumption.
She worked with David Anderson, professor of
biology at Wake Forest, on the study. Since
1999, Anderson and his research team have
studied survival rates of waved albatrosses on
Española Island in the Galapagos Islands,
located off the coast of Ecuador. Española is a
small island where almost all of the waved
albatrosses in the world nest and breed.
Identification bands from 23 waved
albatrosses killed in 2005 were returned to the
researchers by fishermen. The researchers put
bands on a total of 2,550 albatrosses, so almost
one out of every 100 birds is being killed
unintentionally or intentionally by fishermen.
As part of the study, the researchers and
colleagues in Peru also surveyed 37 major
fishing communities to investigate albatross
interactions with fisheries in the main areas
where they forage for food off the Peruvian
coast. They sent observers out on fishing
vessels to find out what happens when fishermen
encounter the giant seabirds. The observers
found that some albatrosses became tangled
accidentally in submerged gillnets. Although
some of the birds caught in nets could be
released, fishermen often killed them for food
instead. The fishermen also intentionally caught
albatrosses on baited hooks.
More males (82 percent of all captures) were
killed than females, Awkerman said. That is
particularly troubling because albatrosses
require both parents to raise chicks. Fewer
males in the population limit the number of
breeding pairs. For a species that depends on a
lifespan of several decades to successfully
reproduce even one offspring that outlives the
parent, the implications of their shortened
lives are grim.
“Fishing mortality could be partially
responsible for an apparent decline in the
breeding population,” Awkerman said. “Our study
puts together a frightening picture of what the
potential for this species is. But, with
educational outreach and further research there
is potential to turn this around before too much
damage is done.”
Communicating with the fishermen about the
consequences to the species of killing each
waved albatross is the key, Awkerman said.
Collaborators in Peru continue discussions with
both fishermen and government officials to
address these conservation concerns. “Our study
has already had a positive political effect,
alerting the Ecuadorian and Peruvian Ministries
of Environment of the problem occurring in their
two countries, and they have recently had
meetings to begin to deal with it,” Anderson
said.
Source:- Wake Forest University
Published on the 11th October 2006