Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Sharks, turtles and other sea creatures face greater risk from industrial fishing than previously thought

Sharks, turtles and other sea creatures face greater risk from industrial fishing than previously thought
A Hawaiian monk seal entangled on a large fishing float. Credit: ,

My colleagues and I mapped activity in the northeast Pacific of "dark" fishing vessels—boats that turn off their location devices or lose signal for technical reasons. In published in Science Advances, we found that highly mobile marine predators, such as sea lions, sharks and leatherback sea turtles, are significantly because of large numbers of dark fishing vessels operating where these species live.

While we couldn't directly watch the activities of each of these dark vessels, , including and machine learning, make it possible to estimate where they go when they are not broadcasting their locations.

Examining five years of data from fishing location devices and the habitats of 14 large marine species, including seabirds, sharks, turtles, and tunas, we found that our estimates of risk to these animals increased by nearly 25% when we accounted for the presence of dark vessels. For some individual predators, such as albacore and bluefin tunas, this adjustment increased risk by over 36%. The main hot spots were in the Bering Sea and along the Pacific coast of North America.

How we did our work

Fishing boats use , or AIS, to avoid colliding with each other. Their AIS signals bounce off satellites to reach nearby ships.

This data is a valuable tool for and . AIS data captures an estimated of fishing operations occurring more than 100 nautical miles from shore.

But in some areas, vessels' AIS signals can't reach the satellites, either because reception is poor or many boats are crowded together—much as cellphones can have difficulty sending text messages in remote wildness or in crowded stadiums. And just as location tracking can be disabled on phones, fishing vessels can intentionally disable their AIS if they want to hide their location. Boats that do this may be engaged in criminal activities, such as .

We calculated how much risk dark vessels pose to by overlapping their activity with the modeled habitats of 14 highly mobile marine predators. Using the same method, we also calculated how much risk observable fishing vessels that broadcast their locations pose to marine life. These two calculations allowed us to understand the additional risk from dark fishing vessels.

Why it matters

We know that many sea creatures, including endangered species, are , and . More overlap between wildlife and fishing boats means that those harmful impacts are more likely to happen.

Bycatch, or accidental take, is the leading threat to some endangered marine species.

Even considering only , the presence of boats signals considerable risk for marine life. For example, forage in Pacific coastal waters from the Canadian border to Baja California and are accidentally caught by boats fishing for hake and halibut. We found observable fishing activity in over 45% of the sea lions' habitat.

In another example, migratory feed on salmon near Alaska's Aleutian Islands during the summer and breed in warmer waters off the coasts of Oregon and California during the winter. Along their journey, salmon sharks are accidentally caught in and longlines. We detected observable vessel fishing activity in nearly one-third of salmon shark habitat.

Our findings indicate that such threats are higher when dark fishing boats are present. Estimates of risk to California sea lions and salmon sharks increased by 28% and 23%, respectively, when we accounted for dark vessels.

This information could affect fishery regulation. For example, regulators to set catch limits for species such as tuna; higher risk could mean that catch limits need to be lower.

For species such as sea lions and salmon sharks that are accidentally caught by fishermen, higher risk levels could indicate that fishing boats should use more selective gear. California is currently acting on this issue by helping fishermen phase out use of in state waters. These nets, which hang like curtains in the water, catch .

Accounting for dark vessels is particularly important in international waters where boats from multiple countries operate, because AIS data is one of the most complete sources of fishing activity across nations. Tracking dark vessels can help make this information as comprehensive as possible and provide insights into the multinational impacts of fishing.

Our study does not account for vessels that do not use any vessel tracking system, or that use systems other than AIS. Therefore, our risk calculations likely still underestimate the true impact of fisheries on marine predators.

What's next

The world's oceans are rich in life but poor in data, although this is changing. High-resolution may soon offer even more information on risk from dark vessels.

President Joe Biden and other global leaders have pledged to protect . Better data on human-wildlife interactions at sea can help ensure that new protected areas are in the right places to make a difference.

More information: Heather Welch et al, Unseen overlap between fishing vessels and top predators in the northeast Pacific, Science Advances (2024).

Journal information: Science Advances

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Sharks, turtles and other sea creatures face greater risk from industrial fishing than previously thought (2024, March 7) retrieved 16 August 2025 from /news/2024-03-sharks-turtles-sea-creatures-greater.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

New research harnesses AI and satellite imagery to reveal the expanding footprint of human activity at sea

10 shares

Feedback to editors