Impacts of fisheries on seabird communities

Long-line by-catch of albatrosses and petrels may soon lead to species extinctions. Set-net bycatch has caused major reductions in certain seabird populations. Some fisheries may decrease numbers of seabirds by reducing abundance of prey-fish. Other fisheries may increase seabird numbers, by increas...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robert W. Furness
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas 2003-07-01
Series:Scientia Marina
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/541
id doaj-4f1ae114717b44b4af37bf641744d4d3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4f1ae114717b44b4af37bf641744d4d32021-05-05T13:49:47ZengConsejo Superior de Investigaciones CientíficasScientia Marina0214-83581886-81342003-07-0167S2334510.3989/scimar.2003.67s233535Impacts of fisheries on seabird communitiesRobert W. Furness0Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, Graham Kerr Building, University of GlasgowLong-line by-catch of albatrosses and petrels may soon lead to species extinctions. Set-net bycatch has caused major reductions in certain seabird populations. Some fisheries may decrease numbers of seabirds by reducing abundance of prey-fish. Other fisheries may increase seabird numbers, by increasing prey-fish abundance through depletion of predatory fish stocks, or by provision of offal and discards. These latter impacts of fisheries on seabirds are often difficult to measure against a background of many and varied environmental and human influences. Depletion of stocks of small lipid-rich fish have reduced numbers of seabirds, in Peru, the Norwegian Sea, and the Barents Sea. However, reductions of predatory fish stocks in the North Sea have more than compensated for quantities of sandeels removed by the sandeel fishery. While piscivorous fish stocks remain low, sandeel fishery and seabirds appear to be able to coexist. However, if piscivorous fish stocks recover in the North Sea, reduced availability of sandeels to seabirds may affect certain species. Provision of discards and offal can stimulate large increases in scavenging seabird numbers. Desirable reductions in discard rates may have an unfortunate side-effect of forcing some scavenging seabirds to turn to killing smaller seabirds, with drastic consequences for community structure.http://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/541conservationdiscardsecosystemfisheries managementindustrial fisheriespredator-preysandeel
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert W. Furness
spellingShingle Robert W. Furness
Impacts of fisheries on seabird communities
Scientia Marina
conservation
discards
ecosystem
fisheries management
industrial fisheries
predator-prey
sandeel
author_facet Robert W. Furness
author_sort Robert W. Furness
title Impacts of fisheries on seabird communities
title_short Impacts of fisheries on seabird communities
title_full Impacts of fisheries on seabird communities
title_fullStr Impacts of fisheries on seabird communities
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of fisheries on seabird communities
title_sort impacts of fisheries on seabird communities
publisher Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
series Scientia Marina
issn 0214-8358
1886-8134
publishDate 2003-07-01
description Long-line by-catch of albatrosses and petrels may soon lead to species extinctions. Set-net bycatch has caused major reductions in certain seabird populations. Some fisheries may decrease numbers of seabirds by reducing abundance of prey-fish. Other fisheries may increase seabird numbers, by increasing prey-fish abundance through depletion of predatory fish stocks, or by provision of offal and discards. These latter impacts of fisheries on seabirds are often difficult to measure against a background of many and varied environmental and human influences. Depletion of stocks of small lipid-rich fish have reduced numbers of seabirds, in Peru, the Norwegian Sea, and the Barents Sea. However, reductions of predatory fish stocks in the North Sea have more than compensated for quantities of sandeels removed by the sandeel fishery. While piscivorous fish stocks remain low, sandeel fishery and seabirds appear to be able to coexist. However, if piscivorous fish stocks recover in the North Sea, reduced availability of sandeels to seabirds may affect certain species. Provision of discards and offal can stimulate large increases in scavenging seabird numbers. Desirable reductions in discard rates may have an unfortunate side-effect of forcing some scavenging seabirds to turn to killing smaller seabirds, with drastic consequences for community structure.
topic conservation
discards
ecosystem
fisheries management
industrial fisheries
predator-prey
sandeel
url http://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/541
work_keys_str_mv AT robertwfurness impactsoffisheriesonseabirdcommunities
_version_ 1721460703150211072