Assessment of Caspian Seal By-Catch in an Illegal Fishery Using an Interview-Based Approach |
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Authors: | Lilia Dmitrieva Andrey A. Kondakov Eugeny Oleynikov Aidyn Kydyrmanov Kobey Karamendin Yesbol Kasimbekov Mirgaliy Baimukanov Susan Wilson Simon J. Goodman |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom.; 2. Institute of Arid Zones, Southern Scientific Center of Russian Academy of Sciences, Rostov-on-Don, Russian Federation.; 3. Institute of Microbiology and Virology, Almaty, Kazakhstan.; 4. Institute of Hydrobiology and Ecology, Karasaysky Raion, Almaty, Kazakhstan.; 5. Tara Seal Research Centre, Killyleagh, County Down, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom.; Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, United States of America, |
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Abstract: | The Caspian seal (Pusa caspica) has declined by more than 90% since 1900 and is listed as endangered by IUCN. We made the first quantitative assessment of Caspian seal by-catch mortality in fisheries in the north Caspian Sea by conducting semi-structured interviews in fishing communities along the coasts of Russia (Kalmykia, Dagestan), Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. We recorded a documented minimum by-catch of 1,215 seals in the survey sample, for the 2008–2009 fishing season, 93% of which occurred in illegal sturgeon fisheries. Due to the illegal nature of the fishery, accurately quantifying total fishing effort is problematic and the survey sample could reflect less than 10% of poaching activity in the north Caspian Sea. Therefore total annual by-catch may be significantly greater than the minimum documented by the survey. The presence of high by-catch rates was supported independently by evidence of net entanglement from seal carcasses, during a mass stranding on the Kazakh coast in May 2009, where 30 of 312 carcasses were entangled in large mesh sturgeon net remnants. The documented minimum by-catch may account for 5 to 19% of annual pup production. Sturgeon poaching therefore not only represents a serious threat to Caspian sturgeon populations, but may also be having broader impacts on the Caspian Sea ecosystem by contributing to a decline in one of the ecosystem’s key predators. This study demonstrates the utility of interview-based approaches in providing rapid assessments of by-catch in illegal small-scale fisheries, which are not amenable to study by other methods. |
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