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Response of benthic fauna to experimental bottom fishing : A global meta-analysis

Authors :
Claire L. Szostek
Robert A. McConnaughey
Petri Suuronen
Nick Ellis
Kathryn M. Hughes
Adriaan D. Rijnsdorp
Marija Sciberras
Ray Hilborn
Leo J. Clarke
C. Roland Pitcher
Ana M. Parma
Simon Jennings
Ricardo O. Amoroso
Jeremy S. Collie
Michel J. Kaiser
Jan G. Hiddink
Brian Kneafsey
Source :
Fish and Fisheries, 19(4), 698-715, Fish and Fisheries 19 (2018) 4
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Bottom-contact fishing gears are globally the most widespread anthropogenic sources of direct disturbance to the seabed and associated biota. Managing these fishing disturbances requires quantification of gear impacts on biota and the rate of recovery following disturbance. We undertook a systematic review and meta-analysis of 122 experiments on the effects-of-bottom fishing to quantify the removal of benthos in the path of the fishing gear and to estimate rates of recovery following disturbance. A gear pass reduced benthic invertebrate abundance by 26% and species richness by 19%. The effect was strongly gear-specific, with gears that penetrate deeper into the sediment having a significantly larger impact than those that penetrate less. Sediment composition (% mud and presence of biogenic habitat) and the history of fishing disturbance prior to an experimental fishing event were also important predictors of depletion, with communities in areas that were not previously fished, predominantly muddy or biogenic habitats being more strongly affected by fishing. Sessile and low mobility biota with longer life-spans such as sponges, soft corals and bivalves took much longer to recover after fishing (>3 year) than mobile biota with shorter life-spans such as polychaetes and malacostracans (

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14672960
Volume :
19
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Fish and Fisheries
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c35048ed97308d119e6b7b7129913f01
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12283