My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent publication in ICES
JMS, wherein we calculate the material and financial damage caused by
bottlenose dolphins depredating a gillnet fishery in the Northern Aegean
Sea.

Maria Garagouni, Georgia Avgerinou, Foivos-Alexandros Mouchlianitis, George
Minos, Konstantinos Ganias: Questionnaire and experimental surveys show
that dolphins cause substantial losses to a gillnet fishery in the eastern
Mediterranean Sea, ICES Journal of Marine Science, 2022, fsac196,
https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsac196

ABSTRACT
Common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) are known to depredate
fishing gear, resulting in damage to the catch and/or the gear itself. The
extent of this damage and estimated financial loss varies between areas,
métiers, and survey methods. We quantified losses due to bottlenose dolphin
depredation in a coastal gillnet fishery in the Thermaikos Gulf, Greece, in
terms of CPUE reduction, catch damage, and gear damage. Experimental
fishing effort was carried out over two seasons (2020 and 2021), along with
concurrent questionnaire surveys over the second season (2021). Depredation
frequency (∼35%) and CPUE changes due to depredation (a significant
decrease of 45–50%) were similar for both sampling schemes. The number of
damaged fish in experimental hauls increased significantly with dolphin
depredation, but did not fully account for the sizeable loss in marketable
catch, indicating that large numbers of fish were removed from the nets
entirely. Damage to experimental nets increased with dolphin presence and
group size, with an average of 0.59% of net surface area damaged per
depredation event. Both datasets point to annual economic losses of over
€5000 per vessel in this fishery, while the similarity between direct
observations and self-reported losses highlights the usefulness of frequent
questionnaire surveys.

Feel free to contact me with any questions or for a copy of the article:
garagoun...@gmail.com

Cheers,
Maria

--
Dr Maria Garagouni
Postdoctoral Researcher
Marine Living Resources Group
School of Biology
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Greece
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