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Spatiotemporal overlap of baleen whales and krill fisheries in the Western Antarctic Peninsula region

Spatiotemporal overlap of baleen whales and krill fisheries in the Western Antarctic Peninsula region
Spatiotemporal overlap of baleen whales and krill fisheries in the Western Antarctic Peninsula region

In Antarctica, abundant consumers rely on Antarctic krill for food, but krill are also the subject of a commercial fishery. The fishery overlaps in time and space with the foraging areas of these consumers, thus potential competition between krill fisheries and krill consumers is a major management concern. The fishery is managed by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources with an ecosystem approach, according to which fishing should not interfere with either the population growth of krill, or krill-dependent consumers. Krill catches have become increasingly spatially concentrated in a small number of hotspots, raising concerns about how local depletion of krill impacts consumers. Such concentrated fishing demonstrates that there is a mismatch between the spatial and temporal scale at which krill fisheries are currently managed, and that at which fisheries operate and consumers forage. Information on the seasonal dynamics of predator abundance and their foraging behaviour is fundamental to future precautionary management of the krill fishery. We analysed the spatiotemporal distribution of two major krill consumers – humpback and minke whales – and that of krill fishing, off the Western Antarctic Peninsula. We used whale tracking data (58 humpback whale tracks and 19 minke whale tracks) to develop spatial random forest models predicting the monthly distribution of whale foraging areas from January-July. Using these predictions, we calculated spatiotemporally-explicit geographic overlap between whales and fisheries, the latter represented by krill fishing effort and catch data. Over the krill fishing season, fishing effort and catch hotspots shifted to the southwest, into the Bransfield Strait where effort and catch was highest. Predicted humpback whale foraging areas increased in the Bransfield Strait over the same period, while predicted minke whale foraging areas showed an opposite trend. For both we predicted a whale-fishing interaction hotspot in the Bransfield Strait, strongest in April and May. Our results illustrate the fine spatial scale of likely interactions between baleen whales and the krill fishery, and their concentration over the season, underlining the need for fishery management more closely aligned to the spatiotemporal scale of likely predator-fishery interactions.

Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), Antarctic minke whale (Balaenoptera bonaerensis), competition, fishing, humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae), tracking
2296-7745
Reisinger, Ryan R.
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Trathan, Philip N.
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Johnson, Christopher M.
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Joyce, Trevor W.
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Durban, John W.
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Pitman, Robert L.
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Friedlaender, Ari S.
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Reisinger, Ryan R.
4eaf9440-48e5-41fa-853f-d46457e5444e
Trathan, Philip N.
7cfb62c3-4327-4c1e-b936-8835b9e7c57c
Johnson, Christopher M.
943218a6-94b6-4e7c-bb44-158e76540b69
Joyce, Trevor W.
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Durban, John W.
1260fe85-7259-4eb9-a4e7-10f7e428943a
Pitman, Robert L.
03eae595-8f28-4c0a-a91d-eff62edf505b
Friedlaender, Ari S.
bceec0b0-26aa-45be-91b9-a9e9c278494b

Reisinger, Ryan R., Trathan, Philip N., Johnson, Christopher M., Joyce, Trevor W., Durban, John W., Pitman, Robert L. and Friedlaender, Ari S. (2022) Spatiotemporal overlap of baleen whales and krill fisheries in the Western Antarctic Peninsula region. Frontiers in Marine Science, 9, [914726]. (doi:10.3389/fmars.2022.914726).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In Antarctica, abundant consumers rely on Antarctic krill for food, but krill are also the subject of a commercial fishery. The fishery overlaps in time and space with the foraging areas of these consumers, thus potential competition between krill fisheries and krill consumers is a major management concern. The fishery is managed by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources with an ecosystem approach, according to which fishing should not interfere with either the population growth of krill, or krill-dependent consumers. Krill catches have become increasingly spatially concentrated in a small number of hotspots, raising concerns about how local depletion of krill impacts consumers. Such concentrated fishing demonstrates that there is a mismatch between the spatial and temporal scale at which krill fisheries are currently managed, and that at which fisheries operate and consumers forage. Information on the seasonal dynamics of predator abundance and their foraging behaviour is fundamental to future precautionary management of the krill fishery. We analysed the spatiotemporal distribution of two major krill consumers – humpback and minke whales – and that of krill fishing, off the Western Antarctic Peninsula. We used whale tracking data (58 humpback whale tracks and 19 minke whale tracks) to develop spatial random forest models predicting the monthly distribution of whale foraging areas from January-July. Using these predictions, we calculated spatiotemporally-explicit geographic overlap between whales and fisheries, the latter represented by krill fishing effort and catch data. Over the krill fishing season, fishing effort and catch hotspots shifted to the southwest, into the Bransfield Strait where effort and catch was highest. Predicted humpback whale foraging areas increased in the Bransfield Strait over the same period, while predicted minke whale foraging areas showed an opposite trend. For both we predicted a whale-fishing interaction hotspot in the Bransfield Strait, strongest in April and May. Our results illustrate the fine spatial scale of likely interactions between baleen whales and the krill fishery, and their concentration over the season, underlining the need for fishery management more closely aligned to the spatiotemporal scale of likely predator-fishery interactions.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 21 July 2022
Published date: 21 July 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: Funding for this work was provided by the Antarctic Wildlife Research Fund. Tracking work was supported by National Science Foundation Office of Polar Programs awards ANT-0823101, 1250208, and 1440435, by the Lindblad Expeditions−National Geographic Fund, the International Whaling Commission Southern Ocean Research Partnership and the Hogwarts Running Club. PT was supported by the UKRI/BAS Ecosystems programme. Funding Information: We thank the CCAMLR Secretariat for providing access to C1 catch and effort data, and the International Whaling Commission for providing the whaling catch data. We also thank colleagues at the Australian Antarctic Division, including Mike Double, Virginia Andrews Goff, and Elanor Bell, for their support of this research as part of the International Whaling Commission Southern Ocean Research Partnership. We are grateful to Lindblad expeditions and the officers and crew of the M/V National Geographic for support of field operations. Holly Fearnbach assisted with these field operations. Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2022 Reisinger, Trathan, Johnson, Joyce, Durban, Pitman and Friedlaender.
Keywords: Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), Antarctic minke whale (Balaenoptera bonaerensis), competition, fishing, humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae), tracking

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 469858
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469858
ISSN: 2296-7745
PURE UUID: 10c90eaa-4465-4253-81d8-b2b01f9d5034
ORCID for Ryan R. Reisinger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8933-6875

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Date deposited: 27 Sep 2022 16:39
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:03

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Contributors

Author: Philip N. Trathan
Author: Christopher M. Johnson
Author: Trevor W. Joyce
Author: John W. Durban
Author: Robert L. Pitman
Author: Ari S. Friedlaender

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