Dear colleagues,


We are pleased to share our new open-access article "A systematic review of 
sensory deterrents for bycatch mitigation of marine megafauna", which is now 
available online:

Lucas, S., Berggren, P. A systematic review of sensory deterrents for bycatch 
mitigation of marine megafauna. Rev Fish Biol Fisheries (2022). 
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11160-022-09736-5



Abstract: Marine megafauna are critical for marine ecosystem health and their 
removal can cause food webs to collapse. Methods to reduce marine megafauna 
mortality can result in conflict between scientists, conservationists, fishers 
and fisheries management due to real or perceived effects on target catch, 
income and food security. Sensory deterrents have been used in attempts to 
mitigate bycatch and retain target catch quantity and quality. Here, we 
completed a systematic review of 116 papers, plus 25 literature reviews 
published between 1991 and 2022, to investigate potential for sensory 
deterrents to mitigate bycatch across four marine megafauna taxonomic groups 
(marine mammals, sea turtles, seabirds and elasmobranchs). Lights on gillnets 
are the only technology so far to result in significant bycatch reductions 
across all four taxonomic groups. It is difficult to make generalisations about 
the efficacy of sensory deterrents and their ability to deliver consistent 
bycatch reductions. The efficacy of each method is context dependent, varying 
with species, fishery and environmental characteristics. Further research is 
recommended for field studies assessing bycatch mitigation in all sensory 
deterrents, including combinations of deterrents, to assess effects on target 
and non-target species. The associated issues of habituation, habitat exclusion 
and foraging around fishing gear are important, although reducing mortality of 
vulnerable species should remain the highest priority for conservation and 
preserving ecosystems that fishers depend on. Multiple complementary measures 
will be required to achieve consistent bycatch reduction targets in many 
fisheries, of which sensory deterrents could play some part if implemented 
appropriately.



Kind regards,

Sol Lucas
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