| Literature DB >> 24892908 |
Thomas W Bodey1, Mark J Jessopp2, Stephen C Votier3, Hans D Gerritsen4, Ian R Cleasby5, Keith C Hamer6, Samantha C Patrick7, Ewan D Wakefield8, Stuart Bearhop9.
Abstract
Exploitation of the seas is currently unsustainable, with increasing demand for marine resources placing intense pressure on the Earth's largest ecosystem [1]. The scale of anthropogenic effects varies from local to entire ocean basins [1-3]. For example, discards of commercial capture fisheries can have both positive and negative impacts on scavengers at the population and community-level [2-6], although this is driven by individual foraging behaviour [3,7]. Currently, we have little understanding of the scale at which individual animals initiate such behaviours. We use the known interaction between fisheries and a wide-ranging seabird, the Northern gannet Morus bassanus[3], to investigate how fishing vessels affect individual birds' behaviours in near real-time. We document the footprint of fishing vessels' (≥15 m length) influence on foraging decisions (≤11 km), and a potential underlying behavioural mechanism, by revealing how birds respond differently to vessels depending on gear type and activity. Such influences have important implications for fisheries, including the proposed discard ban [8]), and wider marine management.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24892908 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.04.041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834