4.8 Article

Global analysis of depletion and recovery of seabed biota after bottom trawling disturbance

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1618858114

Keywords

logistic recovery model; systematic review; metaanalysis; impacts; trawling

Funding

  1. David and Lucile Packard Foundation
  2. Walton Family Foundation
  3. Alaska Seafood Cooperative
  4. American Seafoods Group
  5. Blumar Seafoods Denmark
  6. Clearwater Seafoods
  7. Espersen Group
  8. Glacier Fish Company LLC
  9. Gortons Inc.
  10. Independent Fisheries Limited N.Z.
  11. Nippon Suisan (USA), Inc.
  12. Pacific Andes International Holdings, Ltd.
  13. Pesca Chile, S.A.
  14. San Arawa, S.A.
  15. Sanford Ltd. N.Z.
  16. Sealord Group Ltd. N.Z.
  17. South African Trawling Association
  18. Trident Seafoods
  19. United Kingdom Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs [MF1225]
  20. European Union [BENTHIS EU-FP7 312088]
  21. International Council for the Exploration of the Sea Science Fund
  22. Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations

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Bottom trawling is the most widespread human activity affecting seabed habitats. Here, we collate all available data for experimental and comparative studies of trawling impacts on whole communities of seabed macroinvertebrates on sedimentary habitats and develop widely applicable methods to estimate depletion and recovery rates of biota after trawling. Depletion of biota and trawl penetration into the seabed are highly correlated. Otter trawls caused the least depletion, removing 6% of biota per pass and penetrating the seabed on average down to 2.4 cm, whereas hydraulic dredges caused the most depletion, removing 41% of biota and penetrating the seabed on average 16.1 cm. Median recovery times posttrawling (from 50 to 95% of unimpacted biomass) ranged between 1.9 and 6.4 y. By accounting for the effects of penetration depth, environmental variation, and uncertainty, the models explained much of the variability of depletion and recovery estimates from single studies. Coupled with large-scale, high-resolution maps of trawling frequency and habitat, our estimates of depletion and recovery rates enable the assessment of trawling impacts on unprecedented spatial scales.

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