TY - JOUR
T1 - Interactions between anchovy fisheries and Peruvian boobies revealed by bird-borne cameras and movement loggers
AU - Clark, Bethany L.
AU - Irigoin-Lovera, Cinthia
AU - Gonzales-DelCarpio, Diego D.
AU - Diaz-Santibañez, Isabella
AU - Votier, Stephen C.
AU - Zavalaga, Carlos B.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements. We thank Agro Rural administration personnel for allowing us to use the houses and installations on Macabi Island during our fieldwork. We also appreciate the help and hospitality of Agro Rural rangers Mario Cano and Antonio Alvarez. Jesica Pino from Federación de Inte-gración y Unificación de los Pescadores Artesanales del Perú provided support with data from vessel fishing activities during the fieldwork while we were collecting data on the island. We thank the Peruvian Government’s Ministry of Production, Fisheries Sector and Global Fishing Watch for making the fishing effort data publicly available. We are grateful to David Pascall for advice on statistical analysis. Funding for this research was provided by the Programa Nacional de Innovación en Pesca y Acuicultura (PNIPA) and Universidad Científica del Sur (Project Number PNIPA-PES-SIADE-PP-000169, Contract 271-2019-PNIPA-SP). C.B.Z., B.L.C. and S.C.V. designed the study; C.B.Z., C.I.L., D.D.G.D. and I.D.S. collected the data; C.I.L., D.D.G.D. and I.D.S. analysed the video data; B.L.C. performed the statistical analysis and produced the figures; B.L.C., C.B.Z. and S.C.V. wrote the manuscript and all authors commented on the text. GPS data are stored and available to request via the BirdLife International Seabird Tracking Database, dataset IDs 1825 for 2020 and 1826 for 2021 (www.seabirdtracking.org).
Publisher Copyright:
© Inter-Research 2022.
PY - 2022/11/24
Y1 - 2022/11/24
N2 - Fisheries threaten marine predator populations through bycatch and competition for the same resources, but may also provide feeding opportunities. Understanding benefits and mitigating impacts, therefore, requires a detailed understanding of fishery interactions. The Humboldt Current system supports the world's largest single-species fishery (Peruvian anchoveta Engraulis ringens), along with abundant marine predators dependent on these forage fish, including seabirds. We combined bird-borne video cameras and GPS-acceleration-dive loggers to quantify the foraging behaviour of chick-rearing Peruvian boobies Sula variegata around Isla Macabi, Peru, in December 2020 and May 2021. Videos revealed that 18% of 77 Peruvian booby foraging trips included feeding at actively fishing purse seine vessels, diving in and around the nets. Most vessel interactions were close to the colony, and we found no difference in foraging effort (e.g. trip duration) between trips with and without vessel interactions. We recorded fishing effort in the foraging range of the colony using remotely sensed data from the vessel monitoring system accessed via Global Fishing Watch, finding more frequent interactions and catch depredation when fishing effort was high near the colony. We found no evidence that birds expended additional energy (e.g. dynamic body acceleration) or travelled to different locations to reach vessels. We emphasise the value of combining high-resolution movement and video loggers with remotely sensed fisheries data to monitor seabird−fishery interactions in detail, rather than just spatio-temporal overlap, and assess the potential for competition and bycatch. Threatened seabird populations may benefit from no-take zones or reduced fishing effort in core foraging areas of colonies.
AB - Fisheries threaten marine predator populations through bycatch and competition for the same resources, but may also provide feeding opportunities. Understanding benefits and mitigating impacts, therefore, requires a detailed understanding of fishery interactions. The Humboldt Current system supports the world's largest single-species fishery (Peruvian anchoveta Engraulis ringens), along with abundant marine predators dependent on these forage fish, including seabirds. We combined bird-borne video cameras and GPS-acceleration-dive loggers to quantify the foraging behaviour of chick-rearing Peruvian boobies Sula variegata around Isla Macabi, Peru, in December 2020 and May 2021. Videos revealed that 18% of 77 Peruvian booby foraging trips included feeding at actively fishing purse seine vessels, diving in and around the nets. Most vessel interactions were close to the colony, and we found no difference in foraging effort (e.g. trip duration) between trips with and without vessel interactions. We recorded fishing effort in the foraging range of the colony using remotely sensed data from the vessel monitoring system accessed via Global Fishing Watch, finding more frequent interactions and catch depredation when fishing effort was high near the colony. We found no evidence that birds expended additional energy (e.g. dynamic body acceleration) or travelled to different locations to reach vessels. We emphasise the value of combining high-resolution movement and video loggers with remotely sensed fisheries data to monitor seabird−fishery interactions in detail, rather than just spatio-temporal overlap, and assess the potential for competition and bycatch. Threatened seabird populations may benefit from no-take zones or reduced fishing effort in core foraging areas of colonies.
KW - Anchoveta
KW - Bio-logging
KW - Fishing impact
KW - Humboldt Current
KW - Seabirds
KW - Seabird−fishery interactions
KW - Sula variegata
KW - Vessel monitoring system
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85144496440&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3354/meps14195
DO - 10.3354/meps14195
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85144496440
SN - 0171-8630
VL - 701
SP - 145
EP - 157
JO - Marine Ecology Progress Series
JF - Marine Ecology Progress Series
ER -