A cost effective approach to protecting deep-sea coral and sponge ecosystems with an application to Alaska's Aleutian Islands region

There is much debate about how to protect deep-sea coral and sponge ecosystems using the data currently available. The Aleutian Islands in Alaska contain some of the most abundant, diverse, and pristine deep-sea coral and sponge ecosystems on Earth. From 1990 to 2002, U.S. federal fishery observer data indicates approximately 2,176,648 kg of coral and sponge bycatch occurred in the Aleutian Islands, equaling 52 % of all coral and sponge bycatch in Alaska. Coral and sponge bycatch rates in the Aleutians were over 12 times the rate in the Bering Sea or Gulf of Alaska. The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) estimates that 87 % of coral bycatch and 91 % of sponge bycatch is caused by bottom trawling in the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands management areas. The conservation organization Oceana developed an interdisciplinary fishery management approach to mitigating adverse impacts of fishing on deep-sea coral and sponge ecosystems, which has been used by NMFS to formulate a habitat protection alternative for the Aleutian Islands that is being considered in an Environmental Impact Statement. The Oceana Approach is offered as a cost effective model for reducing the adverse effects of fishing on deep-sea coral and sponge ecosystems. The approach uses observer data to identify areas of high coral and sponge bycatch rates to develop a comprehensive management policy that allows bottom trawling only in specific designated areas with high fish harvest and low habitat impacts. All areas not specified as open would be closed to bottom trawling. To prevent effort displacement, bottom trawl effort is reduced by the amount that historically occurred in areas that would become closed. The Oceana Approach also includes coral and sponge bycatch limits and a plan for comprehensive seafloor research, mapping, and monitoring. An enforcement strategy for these management measures is developed based on agency capabilities, and includes increased observer coverage, vessel monitoring systems, and electronic logbooks. This approach allows for continued catch of target species with minimal adverse impacts on coral and sponge habitat. Successful implementation of the Oceana Approach will protect areas of high known trawl impacts to deep-sea coral and sponge ecosystems and prevent trawl effort from moving into new, unexplored areas. The methodology is recommended for application to other regions and should be adjusted based on the available fishery and biological data for each region.

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