Mortality of dolphins and porpoises in coastal fisheries off Peru and southern Ecuador in 1994

Koen Van Waerebeek*, Marie Françoise Van Bressem, Fernando Félix, Joanna Alfaro-Shigueto, Aquiles García-Godos, Laura Chávez-Lisambart, Karina Ontón, David Montes, Ruth Bello

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

60 Scopus citations

Abstract

Of 722 cetaceans captured mostly in multi-filament gillnets and landed at Cerro Azul, central Peru, in 87 days during January-August 1994, 82.7% were dusky dolphin Lagenorhynchus obscurus, 12.6% Burmeister's porpoise Phocoena spinipinnis, 2.4% long-beaked common dolphin Delphinus capensis and 2.4% bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus. The total kill estimate for a seven-month period, stratified by month, was 1567 ± 237 (SE) cetaceans. Data collected at 16 other ports showed that high levels of dolphin and porpoise mortality persisted in coastal Peru at least until August 1994 when an unimplemented 1990 ban on small cetacean exploitation was renewed. Circumstantial evidence suggests that, thereafter, increasing enforcement reduced direct takes and illegal trade in meat but also hampered monitoring. The absence of abundance data precludes any assessment of impact on populations. An interview study in October-December 1994 of the extensive multi-filament gillnet fishery from Puerto Bolivar in southern Ecuador indicated, despite a low catch rate per boat, an estimated annual take of 227 bottlenose dolphins in the inner estuary of the Gulf of Gaayaquil. This represents some 9% of the resident bottlenose dolphin population, or more than twice its estimated birth rate. Two mono-filament gillnet boats did not report any entangled cetaceans.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)43-49
Number of pages7
JournalBiological Conservation
Volume81
Issue number1-2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1997
Externally publishedYes

Funding

We sincerely thank R. Mejla and J. Loaiza for their conscientious survey work in Puerto Bolivar and Ray Gambell and B. N. K. Davis for reviewing the manuscript. We are greatly indebted to Karen Geysen and family, J. Van Goethem, Steve Leatherwood, Vassili Papastavrou, Randy Reeves and Bill Rossiter for help with fund raising and encouragement. Field work was supported by the Belgian Agency for Development Aid (AGCD), Cetacean Society International, Greenpeace International, Leopold III Fund for Nature Research and Conservation, Marine Research and Education, Pro Delphinus and WDCS.

FundersFunder number
Belgian Agency for Development Aid
Greenpeace International
Leopold III Fund for Nature Research and Conservation
Marine Research and Education, Pro Delphinus
WDCS
Cetacean Society International

    Keywords

    • Ecuador
    • gillnets
    • monitoring
    • Peru
    • small cetaceans

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