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Buying Years to Extinction: Is Compensatory Mitigation for Marine Bycatch a Sufficient Conservation Measure for Long-Lived Seabirds?

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, March 2009
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Title
Buying Years to Extinction: Is Compensatory Mitigation for Marine Bycatch a Sufficient Conservation Measure for Long-Lived Seabirds?
Published in
PLOS ONE, March 2009
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0004826
Pubmed ID
Authors

José Manuel Igual, Giacomo Tavecchia, Stephanie Jenouvrier, Manuela G. Forero, Daniel Oro

Abstract

Along the lines of the 'polluter pays principle', it has recently been proposed that the local long-line fishing industry should fund eradication of terrestrial predators at seabird breeding colonies, as a compensatory measure for the bycatch caused by the fishing activity. The measure is economically sound, but a quantitative and reliable test of its biological efficacy has never been conducted. Here, we investigated the demographic consequences of predator eradication for Cory's shearwater Calonectris diomedea, breeding in the Mediterranean, using a population model that integrates demographic rates estimated from individual life-history information with experimental measures of predation and habitat structure. We found that similar values of population growth rate can be obtained by different combinations of habitat characteristics, predator abundance and adult mortality, which explains the persistence of shearwater colonies in islands with introduced predators. Even so, given the empirically obtained values of survival, all combinations of predator abundance and habitat characteristics projected a decline in shearwater numbers. Perturbation analyses indicated that the value and the sensitivity of shearwater population growth rates were affected by all covariates considered and their interactions. A decrease in rat abundance delivered only a small increase in the population growth rate, whereas a change in adult survival (a parameter independent of rat abundance) had the strongest impact on population dynamics. When adult survival is low, rat eradication would allow us to "buy" years before extinction but does not reverse the process. Rat eradication can therefore be seen as an emergency measure if threats on adult survival are eliminated in the medium-term period. For species with low fecundity and long life expectancy, our results suggest that rat control campaigns are not a sufficient, self-standing measure to compensate the biological toll of long-line fisheries.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Portugal 4 2%
United Kingdom 3 2%
United States 2 1%
Brazil 2 1%
Germany 1 <1%
Latvia 1 <1%
Sweden 1 <1%
Netherlands 1 <1%
New Zealand 1 <1%
Other 3 2%
Unknown 144 88%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 46 28%
Student > Ph. D. Student 26 16%
Student > Master 21 13%
Other 12 7%
Student > Bachelor 11 7%
Other 30 18%
Unknown 17 10%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 78 48%
Environmental Science 42 26%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 6 4%
Social Sciences 3 2%
Unspecified 3 2%
Other 4 2%
Unknown 27 17%