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Effect of Longline Fisheries Bycatch on Marine Mammals, Seabirds and Sea Turtles

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<a href="/apps/pewlongline"><img src="pewlongline/longline_effort_shapes_map.jpg/variant/thumbnail"></a><br> Fisheries effort from around the world is being compiled and analyzed at Duke University Marine Lab. From this information we may begin deducing its effects on endangered marine mammals, seabirds and sea turtles. For the sake of fisheries management, do intensively fished areas correspond with breeding grounds or home ranges of endangered animals? (contributor: Sloan Freeman)<br> <br> <a href="http://seamap.env.duke.edu/apps/pewlongline/LewisonEtAl2004_LonglinesOnTurtles.pdf">Lewison RL, Freeman SA, Crowder LB (2004) Quantifying the effects of fisheries on threatened species: the impact of pelagic longlines on loggerhead and leatherback sea turtles. ECOLOGY LETTERS 7 (3): 221-231</a>
Effect of Longline Fisheries Bycatch on Marine Mammals, Seabirds and Sea Turtles longline_effort_shapes_map.jpg
 
Effect of Longline Fisheries Bycatch on Marine Mammals, Seabirds and Sea Turtles Quantifying the effects of fisheries on threatened species: the impact of pelagic longlines on loggerhead and leatherback sea turtles
Ecology Letters, April 2004 by Rebecca L. Lewison, Sloan A. Freeman and Larry B. Crowder Duke University Marine Laboratory
 

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