Electrofishing as a potential threat to freshwater cetaceans
Thomas, Peter O.1; Gulland, Frances M. D.1; Reeves, Randall R.2; Kreb, Danielle3; Ding, Wang4; Smith, Brian5; Malik, Muhammad Imran6; Ryan, Gerard E.7; Phay, Somany8
刊名ENDANGERED SPECIES RESEARCH
2019
卷号39期号:1页码:207-220
关键词Freshwater cetaceans River dolphins Finless porpoises Electrofishing Cetacean conservation
ISSN号1863-5407
DOI10.3354/esr00962
英文摘要

Electrofishing is an accepted practice for legal fish sampling and surveying, but its use for subsistence food and market fishing has long been illegal in most countries. Illegal use affects freshwater fish populations in many parts of the world, and has been cited as a cause of mortality for endangered freshwater cetaceans in China (Yangtze dolphins and finless porpoises) and Southeast Asia (Ayeyarwady, Mekong, and Mahakam dolphins in Myanmar, Cambodia, and Indonesia, respectively), although the extent of this threat to cetaceans is unclear. Given their threatened status, these populations can ill afford such mortality in addition to the other threats they face (e.g. entanglement in gillnets, habitat deterioration and loss, declines in prey). Here, we review the evidence that electrofishing is a serious threat to freshwater cetaceans. It may alter the behavior of dolphins and porpoises, and contact with electrical currents may even directly kill or injure these animals, although questions remain unanswered concerning the exact nature and scale of the impacts. While other threats may appear more certain and urgent, electrofishing could be playing a significant role in driving the declines of some critically endangered freshwater cetaceans in Asia. Due to ethical and logistical challenges to improving our understanding of the impacts of electrical currents on cetaceans, clear descriptions of lesions in dead animals found stranded are needed to characterize the damage caused by electrofishing, to be more certain about cause and effect beyond spatiotemporal associations, and to determine the extent of this threat. Mortality from electrofishing seems to be uncommon, but in face of the uncertainties and the numerous other threats to these small populations, high priority should be given to enforcing electrofishing bans in the freshwater habitat of dolphins and finless porpoises.

WOS关键词FISHING METHODS ; DOLPHIN ; RIVER ; EXTINCTION
WOS研究方向Biodiversity & Conservation
语种英语
出版者INTER-RESEARCH
WOS记录号WOS:000487122600016
内容类型期刊论文
源URL[http://ir.ihb.ac.cn/handle/342005/33489]  
专题水生生物研究所_水生生物多样性与资源保护研究中心_期刊论文
通讯作者Thomas, Peter O.
作者单位1.Marine Mammal Commiss, 4340 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814 USA
2.Okapi Wildlife Associates, 27 Chandler Lane, Hudson, PQ J0P 1H0, Canada
3.Yayasan Konservasi Rasi, Komplek Pandan Harum Indah, Samarinda 75124, Kalimantan Timu, Indonesia
4.Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Hydrobiol, Wuhan 430072, Hubei, Peoples R China
5.IUCN SSC Cetacean Specialist Grp, Asian Coastal Cetacean Program, Wildlife Conservat Soc, Arcata, CA 95518 USA
6.WWF Pakistan, IRDCP, Sukkur 65310, Pakistan
7.Univ Melbourne, Sch BioSci, Melbourne, Vic 3052, Australia
8.WWFund Cambodia, 21,St 322,Boeung Keng Kang 1, Chamkar Morn 12300, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Thomas, Peter O.,Gulland, Frances M. D.,Reeves, Randall R.,et al. Electrofishing as a potential threat to freshwater cetaceans[J]. ENDANGERED SPECIES RESEARCH,2019,39(1):207-220.
APA Thomas, Peter O..,Gulland, Frances M. D..,Reeves, Randall R..,Kreb, Danielle.,Ding, Wang.,...&Phay, Somany.(2019).Electrofishing as a potential threat to freshwater cetaceans.ENDANGERED SPECIES RESEARCH,39(1),207-220.
MLA Thomas, Peter O.,et al."Electrofishing as a potential threat to freshwater cetaceans".ENDANGERED SPECIES RESEARCH 39.1(2019):207-220.
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