We are pleased to announce the publication of a new paper titled Is it all 
about the haul? Pelagic false killer whale interactions with longline
fisheries in the central North Pacific

Anderson, D., Baird, R.W., Bradford, A.L., Oleson, E.M., 2020. Is it all about 
the haul? Pelagic false killer whale interactions with longline
fisheries in the central North Pacific.  Fish. Res. 230, 105665

You can download the PDF free for the next 50 days at 
https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1bGRt_3nFpOJXc

A B S T R A C T
Pelagic false killer whales (Pseudorca crassidens) are killed or seriously 
injured in the Hawai‘i-based deep-set
longline fishery more than any other cetacean, with bycatch regularly exceeding 
allowable levels. Telemetry
data from five satellite-tagged whales (from three groups) and longline logbook 
entries (4182 sets) from the
Hawai‘i-based longline fisheries are used to assess the range of the population 
and potential interactions with
longline gear. A switching state-space model with a 4 -h time step was used to 
assess the behavior of the tagged
whales. Two of the groups remained within the U.S. EEZ surrounding the 
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, while
one group spent 87.5 % of its time in international waters to the east of the 
Hawaiian archipelago. Tagged
whales came within 100 km of only 26 sets over the 184 days of tag data, with 
only two of the three groups
coming within 50 km of a set. Only twice were whales (from only one group) 
known to approach closely enough
to interact with gear, during two series of three deep-sets, with only one of 
the six sets recording no catch
(indicating probable catch depredation). Movement towards the sets was most 
dramatic during the haul phase,
in one case the tagged whales moved almost 100 km towards the gear in 7 h. 
During one set in each of the two
interactions, whale behavior changed to ‘area restricted search’ (indicative of 
foraging) during periods that
overlapped with hauling of the gear. Overall, our results show that pelagic 
false killer whales spend a relatively
small proportion of their time interacting with U.S. longline gear, and suggest 
that hauling gear may be an
important cue initiating interactions.

Dave Anderson


-----
Dave Anderson
Research Biologist, Cascadia Research Collective

Cascadia Research Collective
218 1/2 W. 4th Avenue
Olympia, WA 98501
 USA

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