Skip to main content

Longliners, black-browed albatross mortality and bait scavenging in the Falkland Islands: what is the relationship?

Request Meeting Document
Document Number:
WG-FSA-03/92
Author(s):
T.A. Reid and B.J. Sullivan (United Kingdom)
Accessibility Categories
Request permission to release each time (RP)
Agenda Item(s)
Abstract

The rate of foraging attempts by black–browed albatross on baited hooks during Spanish-system (demersal) longline setting operations, and a range of environmental and operational variables were used to investigate the relationship between their foraging behaviour and their mortality level. Logistic regression highlighted that a complex range of environmental and operational variables and black-browed albatross abundance combined to determine their mortality level. Our results suggest that, examined over a relatively short time period with minimal environmental variation, the rate of black-browed albatross foraging attempts during line setting significantly affects their level of mortality. However, as a range of variables influence mortality, until targeted experimental studies are conducted, we suggest that caution should be exercised using the rate of black-browed albatross foraging attempts as an index of their mortality.