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Evaluating the Potential Effectiveness of Compensatory Mitigation Strategies for Marine Bycatch

Conservationists are continually seeking new strategies to reverse population declines and safeguard against species extinctions. Here we evaluate the potential efficacy of a recently proposed approach to offset a major anthropogenic threat to many marine vertebrates: incidental bycatch in commercia...

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Autores principales: Finkelstein, Myra, Bakker, Victoria, Doak, Daniel F., Sullivan, Ben, Lewison, Rebecca, Satterthwaite, William H., McIntyre, Peter B., Wolf, Shaye, Priddel, David, Arnold, Jennifer M., Henry, Robert W., Sievert, Paul, Croxall, John
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2423618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18560568
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002480
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author Finkelstein, Myra
Bakker, Victoria
Doak, Daniel F.
Sullivan, Ben
Lewison, Rebecca
Satterthwaite, William H.
McIntyre, Peter B.
Wolf, Shaye
Priddel, David
Arnold, Jennifer M.
Henry, Robert W.
Sievert, Paul
Croxall, John
author_facet Finkelstein, Myra
Bakker, Victoria
Doak, Daniel F.
Sullivan, Ben
Lewison, Rebecca
Satterthwaite, William H.
McIntyre, Peter B.
Wolf, Shaye
Priddel, David
Arnold, Jennifer M.
Henry, Robert W.
Sievert, Paul
Croxall, John
author_sort Finkelstein, Myra
collection PubMed
description Conservationists are continually seeking new strategies to reverse population declines and safeguard against species extinctions. Here we evaluate the potential efficacy of a recently proposed approach to offset a major anthropogenic threat to many marine vertebrates: incidental bycatch in commercial fisheries operations. This new approach, compensatory mitigation for marine bycatch (CMMB), is conceived as a way to replace or reduce mandated restrictions on fishing activities with compensatory activities (e.g., removal of introduced predators from islands) funded by levies placed on fishers. While efforts are underway to bring CMMB into policy discussions, to date there has not been a detailed evaluation of CMMB's potential as a conservation tool, and in particular, a list of necessary and sufficient criteria that CMMB must meet to be an effective conservation strategy. Here we present a list of criteria to assess CMMB that are tied to critical ecological aspects of the species targeted for conservation, the range of possible mitigation activities, and the multi-species impact of fisheries bycatch. We conclude that, overall, CMMB has little potential for benefit and a substantial potential for harm if implemented to solve most fisheries bycatch problems. In particular, CMMB is likely to be effective only when applied to short-lived and highly-fecund species (not the characteristics of most bycatch-impacted species) and to fisheries that take few non-target species, and especially few non-seabird species (not the characteristics of most fisheries). Thus, CMMB appears to have limited application and should only be implemented after rigorous appraisal on a case-specific basis; otherwise it has the potential to accelerate declines of marine species currently threatened by fisheries bycatch.
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spelling pubmed-24236182008-06-18 Evaluating the Potential Effectiveness of Compensatory Mitigation Strategies for Marine Bycatch Finkelstein, Myra Bakker, Victoria Doak, Daniel F. Sullivan, Ben Lewison, Rebecca Satterthwaite, William H. McIntyre, Peter B. Wolf, Shaye Priddel, David Arnold, Jennifer M. Henry, Robert W. Sievert, Paul Croxall, John PLoS One Research Article Conservationists are continually seeking new strategies to reverse population declines and safeguard against species extinctions. Here we evaluate the potential efficacy of a recently proposed approach to offset a major anthropogenic threat to many marine vertebrates: incidental bycatch in commercial fisheries operations. This new approach, compensatory mitigation for marine bycatch (CMMB), is conceived as a way to replace or reduce mandated restrictions on fishing activities with compensatory activities (e.g., removal of introduced predators from islands) funded by levies placed on fishers. While efforts are underway to bring CMMB into policy discussions, to date there has not been a detailed evaluation of CMMB's potential as a conservation tool, and in particular, a list of necessary and sufficient criteria that CMMB must meet to be an effective conservation strategy. Here we present a list of criteria to assess CMMB that are tied to critical ecological aspects of the species targeted for conservation, the range of possible mitigation activities, and the multi-species impact of fisheries bycatch. We conclude that, overall, CMMB has little potential for benefit and a substantial potential for harm if implemented to solve most fisheries bycatch problems. In particular, CMMB is likely to be effective only when applied to short-lived and highly-fecund species (not the characteristics of most bycatch-impacted species) and to fisheries that take few non-target species, and especially few non-seabird species (not the characteristics of most fisheries). Thus, CMMB appears to have limited application and should only be implemented after rigorous appraisal on a case-specific basis; otherwise it has the potential to accelerate declines of marine species currently threatened by fisheries bycatch. Public Library of Science 2008-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2423618/ /pubmed/18560568 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002480 Text en Finkelstein et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Finkelstein, Myra
Bakker, Victoria
Doak, Daniel F.
Sullivan, Ben
Lewison, Rebecca
Satterthwaite, William H.
McIntyre, Peter B.
Wolf, Shaye
Priddel, David
Arnold, Jennifer M.
Henry, Robert W.
Sievert, Paul
Croxall, John
Evaluating the Potential Effectiveness of Compensatory Mitigation Strategies for Marine Bycatch
title Evaluating the Potential Effectiveness of Compensatory Mitigation Strategies for Marine Bycatch
title_full Evaluating the Potential Effectiveness of Compensatory Mitigation Strategies for Marine Bycatch
title_fullStr Evaluating the Potential Effectiveness of Compensatory Mitigation Strategies for Marine Bycatch
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the Potential Effectiveness of Compensatory Mitigation Strategies for Marine Bycatch
title_short Evaluating the Potential Effectiveness of Compensatory Mitigation Strategies for Marine Bycatch
title_sort evaluating the potential effectiveness of compensatory mitigation strategies for marine bycatch
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2423618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18560568
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002480
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