@article{714e66d9875044e785a66d031ef2387e,
title = "Beyond Post-release Mortality: Inferences on Recovery Periods and Natural Mortality From Electronic Tagging Data for Discarded Lamnid Sharks",
abstract = "Accurately characterizing the biology of a pelagic shark species is critical when assessing its status and resilience to fishing pressure. Natural mortality (M) is well known to be a key parameter determining productivity and resilience, but also one for which estimates are most uncertain. While M can be inferred from life history, validated direct estimates are extremely rare for sharks. Porbeagle (Lamna nasus) and shortfin mako (Isurus oxyrinchus) are presently overfished in the North Atlantic, but there are no directed fisheries and successful live release of bycatch is believed to have increased. Understanding M, post-release mortality (PRM), and variables that affect mortality are necessary for management and effective bycatch mitigation. From 177 deployments of archival satellite tags, we inferred mortality events, characterized physiological recovery periods following release, and applied survival mixture models to assess M and PRM. We also evaluated covariate effects on the duration of any recovery period and PRM to inform mitigation. Although large sample sizes involving extended monitoring periods (>90 days) would be optimal to directly estimate M from survival data, it was possible to constrain estimates and infer probable values for both species. Furthermore, the consistency of M estimates with values derived from longevity information suggests that age determination is relatively accurate for these species. Regarding bycatch mitigation, our analyses suggest that juvenile porbeagle are more susceptible to harm during capture and handling, that keeping lamnid sharks in the water during release is optimal, and that circle hooks are associated with longer recovery periods for shortfin mako.",
keywords = "Atlantic, Natural mortality, bycatch, lamnid sharks, mitigation, recovery period, survival",
author = "Bowlby, {Heather D.} and Beno{\^i}t, {Hugues P.} and Warren Joyce and James Sulikowski and Rui Coelho and Andr{\'e}s Domingo and Enric Cort{\'e}s and Fabio Hazin and David Macias and G{\'e}rard Biais and Catarina Santos and Brooke Anderson",
note = "Funding Information: Funding. Tagging in Canadian waters was done in collaboration with the Nova Scotia Swordfish Association, Atlantic Shark Association, Javitech Atlantic Ltd., and Karlsen Shipping Company Ltd., with funding provided under the International Governance Strategy of Fisheries and Oceans, Canada. Tagging on Portuguese vessels was carried out by onboard observers under the PNAB/EU-DCF (National Program for Biological Sampling, integrated in the EU Data Collection Framework), with additional tags coming from Project SAFEWATERS (Ref: EU/MARE/2012/21) and Project MAKO-WIDE (Ref: FAPESP/19740/2014), funded by FCT, the Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation. Tagging by Ifremer (France) was done during a scientific survey in collaboration with the regional professional fishing organization of Pays de Loire and funded by the European Union. Deployments by ICCAT were funded by the European Union (EU Grant Agreements—Strengthening the scientific basis for decision-making in ICCAT) and by the Commission as part of the ICCAT regular budget. C. C. Santos is supported by a FCT Doctoral grant (Ref: SFRH/BD/139187/2018). Funding Information: Tagging in Canadian waters was done in collaboration with the Nova Scotia Swordfish Association, Atlantic Shark Association, Javitech Atlantic Ltd., and Karlsen Shipping Company Ltd., with funding provided under the International Governance Strategy of Fisheries and Oceans, Canada. Tagging on Portuguese vessels was carried out by onboard observers under the PNAB/EU-DCF (National Program for Biological Sampling, integrated in the EU Data Collection Framework), with additional tags coming from Project SAFEWATERS (Ref: EU/MARE/2012/21) and Project MAKO-WIDE (Ref: FAPESP/19740/2014), funded by FCT, the Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation. Tagging by Ifremer (France) was done during a scientific survey in collaboration with the regional professional fishing organization of Pays de Loire and funded by the European Union. Deployments by ICCAT were funded by the European Union (EU Grant Agreements—Strengthening the scientific basis for decision-making in ICCAT) and by the Commission as part of the ICCAT regular budget. C. C. Santos is supported by a FCT Doctoral grant (Ref: SFRH/BD/139187/2018). Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Copyright {\textcopyright} 2021 Bowlby, Beno{\^i}t, Joyce, Sulikowski, Coelho, Domingo, Cort{\'e}s, Hazin, Macias, Biais, Santos and Anderson.",
year = "2021",
month = apr,
day = "7",
doi = "10.3389/fmars.2021.619190",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "8",
journal = "Frontiers in Marine Science",
issn = "2296-7745",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S. A.",
}