Bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves

Bottom trawlers land around 19 million tons of fish and invertebrates annually, almost one-quarter of wild marine landings. The extent of bottom trawling footprint (seabed area trawled at least once in a specified region and time period) is often contested but poorly described. We quantify footprint...

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Published in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Main Authors: Collie, Jeremy, al, et
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@URI 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/gsofacpubs/723
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1802379115
https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/gsofacpubs/article/1690/viewcontent/Collie_BottomTrawling_2018.pdf
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spelling ftunivrhodeislan:oai:digitalcommons.uri.edu:gsofacpubs-1690 2024-09-15T17:59:38+00:00 Bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves Collie, Jeremy al, et 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/gsofacpubs/723 https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1802379115 https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/gsofacpubs/article/1690/viewcontent/Collie_BottomTrawling_2018.pdf unknown DigitalCommons@URI https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/gsofacpubs/723 doi:10.1073/pnas.1802379115 https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/gsofacpubs/article/1690/viewcontent/Collie_BottomTrawling_2018.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Graduate School of Oceanography Faculty Publications text 2018 ftunivrhodeislan https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1802379115 2024-08-21T00:09:33Z Bottom trawlers land around 19 million tons of fish and invertebrates annually, almost one-quarter of wild marine landings. The extent of bottom trawling footprint (seabed area trawled at least once in a specified region and time period) is often contested but poorly described. We quantify footprints using high-resolution satellite vessel monitoring system (VMS) and logbook data on 24 continental shelves and slopes to 1,000-m depth over at least 2 years. Trawling footprint varied markedly among regions: from <10% of seabed area in Australian and New Zealand waters, the Aleutian Islands, East Bering Sea, South Chile, and Gulf of Alaska to >50% in some European seas. Overall, 14% of the 7.8 million-km2 study area was trawled, and 86% was not trawled. Trawling activity was aggregated; the most intensively trawled areas accounting for 90% of activity comprised 77% of footprint on average. Regional swept area ratio (SAR; ratio of total swept area trawled annually to total area of region, a metric of trawling intensity) and footprint area were related, providing an approach to estimate regional trawling footprints when high-resolution spatial data are unavailable. If SAR was ≤0.1, as in 8 of 24 regions, there was >95% probability that >90% of seabed was not trawled. If SAR was 7.9, equal to the highest SAR recorded, there was >95% probability that >70% of seabed was trawled. Footprints were smaller and SAR was ≤0.25 in regions where fishing rates consistently met international sustainability benchmarks for fish stocks, implying collateral environmental benefits from sustainable fishing. Text Bering Sea Alaska Aleutian Islands University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 115 43
institution Open Polar
collection University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI
op_collection_id ftunivrhodeislan
language unknown
description Bottom trawlers land around 19 million tons of fish and invertebrates annually, almost one-quarter of wild marine landings. The extent of bottom trawling footprint (seabed area trawled at least once in a specified region and time period) is often contested but poorly described. We quantify footprints using high-resolution satellite vessel monitoring system (VMS) and logbook data on 24 continental shelves and slopes to 1,000-m depth over at least 2 years. Trawling footprint varied markedly among regions: from <10% of seabed area in Australian and New Zealand waters, the Aleutian Islands, East Bering Sea, South Chile, and Gulf of Alaska to >50% in some European seas. Overall, 14% of the 7.8 million-km2 study area was trawled, and 86% was not trawled. Trawling activity was aggregated; the most intensively trawled areas accounting for 90% of activity comprised 77% of footprint on average. Regional swept area ratio (SAR; ratio of total swept area trawled annually to total area of region, a metric of trawling intensity) and footprint area were related, providing an approach to estimate regional trawling footprints when high-resolution spatial data are unavailable. If SAR was ≤0.1, as in 8 of 24 regions, there was >95% probability that >90% of seabed was not trawled. If SAR was 7.9, equal to the highest SAR recorded, there was >95% probability that >70% of seabed was trawled. Footprints were smaller and SAR was ≤0.25 in regions where fishing rates consistently met international sustainability benchmarks for fish stocks, implying collateral environmental benefits from sustainable fishing.
format Text
author Collie, Jeremy
al, et
spellingShingle Collie, Jeremy
al, et
Bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves
author_facet Collie, Jeremy
al, et
author_sort Collie, Jeremy
title Bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves
title_short Bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves
title_full Bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves
title_fullStr Bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves
title_full_unstemmed Bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves
title_sort bottom trawl fishing footprints on the world’s continental shelves
publisher DigitalCommons@URI
publishDate 2018
url https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/gsofacpubs/723
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1802379115
https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/gsofacpubs/article/1690/viewcontent/Collie_BottomTrawling_2018.pdf
genre Bering Sea
Alaska
Aleutian Islands
genre_facet Bering Sea
Alaska
Aleutian Islands
op_source Graduate School of Oceanography Faculty Publications
op_relation https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/gsofacpubs/723
doi:10.1073/pnas.1802379115
https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/gsofacpubs/article/1690/viewcontent/Collie_BottomTrawling_2018.pdf
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1802379115
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
container_volume 115
container_issue 43
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