By SEAN NEALON/OSU News Service
NEWPORT – New research by an Oregon State University-led team is beginning to unravel the times of year and locations where whales are at greatest danger of entanglement in fishing gear on the Oregon Coast.
“We’ve been able to geographically locate some areas where the risk of entanglement for whales is higher,” said Solene Derville, a postdoctoral fellow at OSU’s Marine Mammal Institute in Newport. “We’ve also discovered that risk varies with time. It’s a very dynamic thing. And it varies with responses to ocean conditions.”
The research, outlined in a recently published paper in the journal Biological Conservation and conducted in collaboration with scientists at the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, is important because it provides better tools to manage fisheries, the researchers said.
The research focused on the Dungeness crab fishery, the most economically important in Oregon. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, commercial Dungeness crab pot gear is one of the most frequently identified gear types involved in entanglements along the West Coast.
“The more knowledge we have about when and where whales are, and how that overlaps with the fishery distribution, the better,” said Troy Buell, an ODFW fishery management program leader and co-author of the paper. “It helps us design more targeted management measures that are most effective for the whales, while having the least amount of impact on the fishery.”
The reseachers concluded that fluctuations in climate and ocean conditions, such as the upwelling events and marine heat waves, appear to be the main drivers of entanglement risk to whales in Dungeness crab fishing gear. When this information is combined with time of year and location data, the researchers believe that their findings can support decision making by fishery managers.
“Although there can be inherent tension between commercial fishing and whale entanglements, no one wants to catch a whale and we all want a thriving, sustainable Dungeness crab fishery,” said associate professor Leigh Torres, a co-author of the new paper. “We feel our findings are an important step toward simultaneously achieving both these goals and relieving any tension.”
During an eight-year period ending in 2021, an average of about 35 entanglements were reported annually in West Coast waters, according to NOAA data. That is roughly three times more than the average from the previous eight years. Scientists agree that these counts likely represent only a small fraction of the actual number of entanglements since some may never be observed or reported.
In 2020, ODFW adopted new regulations for the commercial Dungeness crab fishery to address whale entanglement concerns. Several key provisions of those rules end after the current Dungeness crab season. ODFW will take into account findings from this just-published paper to evaluate their effectiveness and by fall recommend to continue or adjust the regulations for future seasons, said Kelly Corbett, ODFW’s commercial crab project leader and a co-author of the paper.
Entanglement in fishing gear presents a major threat to whales because it can drown individuals, cause long-term injuries that impact individual health by limiting their ability to eat, travel and reproduce, and potentially affect population abundance. Entanglement is a pressing concern for whales off the West Coast, where documented entanglements have risen sharply during the past decade.
For the new paper, the researchers focused on humpback, fin and blue whales along the Oregon Coast. Humpback whales are most frequently reported as entangled with Dungeness crab gear on the West Coast. To a lesser extent, endangered blue and fin whales are also at risk of entanglement, although neither species have been confirmed entangled in any Oregon fishing gear, the researchers note.
The researchers drew on past work by the Oregon State team that estimated rorqual whale density, including via monthly helicopter flights along the coastline.
The research team predicted monthly whale densities in Oregon based on variation in ocean and climate conditions for the period 2011-2020. The team then overlaid these maps with data on Dungeness crab fishing locations to determine where and when whales were most at risk of entanglement with crab gear.
Among their findings:
- Entanglement exposure was higher on average in nearshore waters (less than about 240 feet deep) off Astoria, off Garibaldi, north of Newport, north of Charleston, north of Port Orford and at the southern border of Oregon waters.
- Exposure peaked in April, when whales were predicted to occur in greater numbers and closer to shore due to the onset of the upwelling season. Upwelling is the process where deeper, cooler water is pushed toward the surface where it encounters light to support productivity and aggregations of krill that whales feed on.
- Exposure remained constant until the end of the crab season in nearshore waters and decreased past these depths.
- Exposure was lower during the marine heatwave from 2014-2016 when fishing was more active nearshore and whales were predicted to be less abundant.
- Exposure was higher before (2011-2013) and after (2017-2020) the heatwave, which corresponds with stronger upwelling periods.
The research was funded by NOAA, the Oregon Dungeness Crab Commission, the Marine Mammal Institute, ODFW and Oregon Sea Grant.
Mary Volk says
I have gone crab fishing off Depoe Bay in Oregon. Not much to get entangled… a crab pot (cage), a line attached to a surface buoy, please elaborate how a multi ton mammal gets entangled in this?
It’s not gill netting.