Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1723804 Ocean & Coastal Management 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Fishers identify collisions between cetaceans and fishing boats.•Collisions could negatively impact the Amazon river dolphin, estuarine dolphin, bottlenose dolphin, southern right whale and humpback whale.•Accidents with riverine dolphins occur due to the curiosity's behavior of species.•Accidents with dolphins occur because they swim at high speed.•The nets are positioned in the baleen whales' routes.

Human Ecology studies have shown the importance of the local knowledge that fishery communities have for providing information on the relationship between fishery and cetaceans. Fishers should be partners in the process of fishery management and they may help in the search for solutions. In this sense, the main objectives of this study are to qualitatively describe the accidents between cetaceans and fishing boats on the Brazilian coast and the Central Amazon region through the perception of the artisanal fishers, and to propose mitigatory measures to decrease their occurrences. From 2005 to 2010, 215 ethnographic interviews were conducted, focusing on this kind of interaction in fishers communities from the states of Amazonas, Bahia, Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul. The interviewed fishers identified five species: Inia geoffrensis, Sotalia guianensis, Tursiops truncatus, Eubalaena australis and Megaptera novaeangliae. The justifications for the occurrence of the accidents described are related to the curiosity behavior of I. geoffrensis during the pursuit of their prey; coastal dolphins (S. guianensis and T. truncatus) tend to swim at high speeds and collide with the boats; and the baleen whales collide while they are trying to protect their calves and during night time, when there is low visibility. In order to decrease the number of these accidents, co-management is proposed, in which local members, researchers and the government would work together to encourage the collective feeling of ownership within the communities aiming to minimize the number of collisions.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
Authors
, , , , , ,