[OANNES Foro] A global overview of legal marine turtle fisheries

Mario Cabrejos casal en infotex.com.pe
Lun Feb 24 18:39:59 PST 2014


Diversity and Distributions
Article first published online: 19 FEB 2014
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12183


So excellent a fishe: a global overview of legal marine turtle fisheries
Frances Humber1,2, Brendan J. Godley2, Annette C. Broderick2,*
1 Blue Ventures Conservation, Level 2 Annex, Omnibus Business Centre, London, UK2 Marine Turtle Research Group, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Penryn, UK * Correspondence: Dr Annette C. Broderick, Marine Turtle Research Group, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus, Penryn TR10 9EZ, UK. E-mail: a.c.broderick en exeter.ac.uk

Abstract
Aim
We provide a global assessment of the current legal direct take of marine turtles, including the scale and species breakdown at country level, and investigate the significance of legal take to marine turtle populations within the wider context of global threats.

Location
World-wide.

Methods
We undertook a comprehensive review of the literature (> 500 publications) and contacted over 150 in-country experts to collate data for countries that permit the legal take of marine turtles (as of 1 January 2013). Current annual take for each country and species was estimated, and estimates were generated for the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s.

Results
Currently, 42 countries and territories permit direct take of turtles and collectively take in excess of 42,000 turtles per year, the majority of which (> 80%) are green turtles Chelonia mydas (Linnaeus 1758). Ten countries account for more than 90% of legal take each year with Papua New Guinea (36.1%) and Nicaragua (22.3%) accounting for more than half of the total global take. Since 1980, we estimate that more than 2 million turtles have been legally taken in these countries, with current levels < 60% of those in the 1980s.

Main conclusions
Our results provide the most comprehensive global synthesis of the legal take of turtles in recent years and suggest that legal take has the potential to be a driver of marine turtle population dynamics, comparable to mortality estimates through recorded bycatch. However, it is likely that illegal take, along with bycatch, is significantly under-recorded and far greater than the total level of directed legal take. This hampers the ability to assess the relative impacts of these threats to marine turtles.
------------ próxima parte ------------
Se ha borrado un adjunto en formato HTML...
URL: <http://lista.oannes.org.pe/pipermail/oannes-oannes.org.pe/attachments/20140224/3ff63abc/attachment.html>


Más información sobre la lista de distribución OANNES