Marine turtle by-catch reduction in the long-line fisheries in the Eastern Pacific Ocean

A vehicle toward sustainable fisheries
By-catch occurs when fishers, in pursuit of their primary catch, inadvertently hook or trap other sea life.
Its impact on sea turtles is worrisome, because all five species of marine turtles are in risk of extinction in theHowever much of this impact is avoidable with a few relatively minor modifications to gear and fishing practices. This project relies on the use of "circle" hooks, which reduces the capture of sea turtles up to 90 per cent and do not affect the catch of commercial species. The method of participation includes the substitution of J hooks with circle hooks, testing experiments, the training of fishermen in best fishing practices and on-board data collection by observers regarding catches and by-catches during long-line fishing operations.
Experimental fishing trips are providing strong evidence in favor of circular hooks as a tool to effectively reduce the by-catch of marine turtle in surface long-line fishing operations. Trials are conducted under normal commercial fishing conditions, and thus providing real life evidence that the project is successful.
Our first two field years:
2004-2005- 2004 program starts in Ecuador.
- In one year the program unveils its potential making remarkable advances, gaining support from the WPRFMC, SRP, WWF, NOAA-USA, IATTC and TOC (see the “links” section).
- The program expands to Panama, Costa Rica, Peru, Guatemala and El Salvador.
- The program expands its coverage to the whole eastern Pacific region.
Sandra Andraka - Program Manager
Latests results
- Results Poster, February 2007 [jpg, 5.46 MB]
- Results Poster, 2004 - 2007 [jpg, 2.08 MB]
- Bycatch Communication Network Newsletter, February - March 2008 [pdf, 250 KB]
Latest News
03 Jul 2008
Azores faces fishing out after court appeal fails
A Court ruling has cleared the way for even more intensive fishing of one of the Atlantic’s most diverse deep sea habitats.
Azores faces fishing out after court appeal fails
A Court ruling has cleared the way for even more intensive fishing of one of the Atlantic’s most diverse deep sea habitats.


