We are pleased to announce our new paper:
Hamilton, S., and Baker, G. B. 2019. Technical mitigation to reduce marine 
mammal bycatch and entanglement in commercial fishing gear: lessons learnt and 
future directions. Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries. 
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11160-019-09550-6

Abstract: Fisheries bycatch is one of the biggest threats to marine mammal 
populations. A literature review was undertaken to provide a comprehensive 
assessment and synopsis of gear modifications and technical devices to reduce 
marine mammal bycatch in commercial trawl, purse seine, longline, gillnet and 
pot/trap fisheries. Successfully implemented mitigation measures include 
acoustic deterrent devices (pingers) which reduced the bycatch of some small 
cetacean species in gillnets, appropriately designed exclusion devices which 
reduced pinniped bycatch in some trawl fisheries, and various pot/trap guard 
designs that reduced marine mammal entrapment. However, substantial development 
and research of mitigation options is required to address the bycatch of a 
range of species in many fisheries. No reliably effective technical solutions 
to reduce small cetacean bycatch in trawl nets are available, although loud 
pingers have shown potential. There are currently no technical options that 
effectively reduce marine mammal interactions in longline fisheries, although 
development of catch and hook protection devices is promising. Solutions are 
also needed for species, particularly pinnipeds and small cetaceans, that are 
not deterred by pingers and continue to be caught in static gillnets. Large 
whale entanglements in static gear, particularly buoy lines for pots/traps, 
needs urgent attention although there is encouraging research on rope-less 
pot/trap systems and identification of rope colours that are more detectable to 
whale species. Future mitigation development and deployment requires rigorous 
scientific testing to determine if significant bycatch reduction has been 
achieved, as well as consideration of potentially conflicting mitigation 
outcomes if multiple species are impacted by a fishery.

Kind regards

Sheryl Hamilton
PhD candidate
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania
Private Bag 129, Hobart TASMANIA 7001
Email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | Web: 
www.imas.utas.edu.au/<http://www.imas.utas.edu.au/>
Telephone: +61 (0)448174298

[cid:[email protected]]


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