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dc.contributor.authorBáez, José C.
dc.contributor.authorCamiñas, Juan A.
dc.contributor.authorAguilera, Raquel
dc.contributor.authorCastro-Gutiérrez, Jairo
dc.contributor.authorReal, Raimundo
dc.date.accessioned2024-04-10T01:04:10Z
dc.date.available2024-04-10T01:04:10Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier10.1007/s11160-023-09759-6
dc.identifier.issn09603166
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12728/10562
dc.description.abstractIn the Northern Alboran Sea, artisanal small-scale fisheries using trammel nets suffer economic losses, and local fishermen see their way-of-life endangered, due to interactions with wildlife species such as alien species and dolphins. On the one hand, the alien seaweed Rugulopteryx okamurae, which was first recorded in the Alboran Sea in 2015, has undergone an intensive expansion in the sub-region, monopolizing the available seabed, causing radical changes in the underwater seascape and clogging the trammel nets. On the other hand, the damage caused to the fishing nets by dolphin fish predation is an ancient problem worldwide, but it is intensifying in the last years. The main objective of this study is to understand the main environmental and technical conditions that favor damages of fishing trammel nets in the Alboran Sea, which entails an important loss of catchability, due to (i) the clogging of the artisanal fishing trammel nets by invasive seaweed, and (ii) the breaking of the nets by dolphin predation. Through close monitoring of fishermen in port, we obtained direct information of 548 sets. Our results indicate that approximately 30% of trammel sets suffered a damage due to unwanted interaction with alien seaweeds and dolphins. As seaweeds invasion is a global problem while dolphin-fishing gear interaction is more local, we concluded that only a large-scale management of exotic algae, together with the involvement of local fishermen, could solve the economic problems of this activity. © 2023, The Author(s).es_ES
dc.description.sponsorshipACCOBAMS; AHE; Asociación Herpetológica Española; Caleta de Vélez and Fuengirola; Spanish Herpetological Society; MAVA Foundationes_ES
dc.language.isoenes_ES
dc.publisherSpringer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbHes_ES
dc.subjectAlien specieses_ES
dc.subjectBrown tideses_ES
dc.subjectDolphines_ES
dc.subjectMediterranean Seaes_ES
dc.subjectNet damagees_ES
dc.titleWhen non-target wildlife species and alien species both affect negatively to an artisanal fishery: the case of trammel net in the Alboran Seaes_ES
dc.typeArticlees_ES


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