Summary
Large numbers of a diverse range of seabird species frequent New Zealand commercial fishing waters. The accurate identification of seabirds captured in New Zealand fisheries is key for examining the potential threat to population viability posed by incidental fisheries captures. Additionally, autopsy is required in the majority of cases to determine age-class, sex and provenance of captured seabirds.
Between 1 October 2008 and 30 September 2009 (the 2008/09 fishing year) a total of 384 seabirds comprising 27 taxa were incidentally killed as bycatch and returned for autopsy by on-board New Zealand Government fisheries observers. Birds were returned from longline, trawl and setnet vessels. Seabirds returned during 2008/09 were dominated numerically by three species (sooty shearwater Puffinus griseus, white-capped albatross Thalassarche steadi and white-chinned petrel Procellaria aequinoctialis).
Half (50%) of birds returned from longline fisheries had injuries consistent with being hooked or entangled in the bill or throat, while most birds (82%) returned from trawl fisheries were killed through entanglement in the net. Warp interaction was the likely cause of death in 18% of trawl specimens. Mean fat scores were generally similar or higher in birds from 2008/09 than in the previous year, although this was not the case for Buller's albatross. Seabirds returned from the 2008/09 fishing year, and from trawl fisheries in particular, showed clear size-related differences in the likely cause of death, and discarded material, including offal, appears to continue to be an attractant for many taxa.
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