SCIENCE: Light sticks may lure turtles to fishing lines

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May 6, 2007, 3:47:06 PM5/6/07
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Light sticks may lure turtles to fishing lines
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CHAPEL HILL -- Thousands of loggerhead turtles die every year when
they get tangled or hooked in commercial fishing longlines meant for
tuna or swordfish. New research suggests a possible reason why turtles
swim into the lines. The glowing light sticks that lure fish to
longlines also attract turtles, according to a University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill study.

The light sticks used in longline fisheries resemble the disposable
plastic tubes popular with children on Halloween. The steady glow
draws fish, which then find baited hooks and are caught on the lines.
The lights also seem to fascinate turtles, however, which are equally
likely to chomp on fish bait, or get snagged in the hooks and lines.

"Juvenile turtles are indiscriminant eaters and bite nearly everything
small that they encounter," said Ken Lohmann, UNC-Chapel Hill
professor of biology and senior author of the study. "Under natural
conditions, most small objects floating or swimming through the sea
are potential sources of food. But nowadays, with fishing lines,
plastic, and garbage in the ocean, biting everything is not such a
great strategy."

The study appears in the May 2007 issue of the journal Animal
Conservation. John Wang, a former graduate student at Carolina and now
a research associate with the Joint Institute for Marine and
Atmospheric Research at the University of Hawaii, was the lead author
of the study. Grants from the National Oceanic & Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and the National Science Foundation provided
funding.

The new findings may help fisheries decrease the number of turtles
caught on lines, the researchers said. Most longlines deploy their
hooks below the depths where turtles usually swim, so shading the
lights to direct illumination downward instead of upward might make
the lights harder for turtles to see. Similarly, switching to colors
that turtles can't detect very well might also reduce turtle deaths.

All sea turtles are endangered species. A recent estimate published in
the journal Ecology Letters suggests 200,000 loggerhead and 50,000
leatherback turtles may die each year in commercial fishery longlines.
Total populations have declined in the past 20 years, Lohmann said.

While it's difficult to separate the impact of longline fisheries from
other threats turtles face, researchers say that the loss to longlines
is significant because the turtles caught are often adolescents, which
die before they have a chance to reproduce. Only about one in 5,000
turtles ever survive to adulthood. In the past, those lucky enough to
last a few years in the ocean could expect a long life and would
replenish the population. With the advent of longline fishing, the
number of survivors has dwindled. "A lot of turtles that beat the odds
and would otherwise have lived long lives are now being caught on
longlines," Lohmann said.

Lohmann, Wang and their team tested loggerhead turtle's response to
light sticks in a large, water-filled tank. Turtles were placed into a
soft cloth harness and tethered to an electronic tracking device that
monitored their movements. Safely encased in the soft fabric and
released in the tank, the turtles swam as if in the open ocean,
apparently unaware that they aren't going anywhere, Wang said.

When glowing light sticks were introduced to the tank, the turtles
swam toward them, as if curious about the lights, Lohmann said. The
color or type of the light stick did not seem to matter. The turtles
paddled toward green, blue and yellow light sticks, as well as toward
both plastic chemical lightsticks and newer models based on reusable
LEDs.

Both captive-raised and wild-caught juvenile turtles were attracted to
glowing light sticks, whether in total darkness or underneath a night
sky, Wang said. When the lights weren't activated, they were
unappealing. The experiments were conducted at the National Marine
Fisheries Services' Galveston Laboratory in Texas and at a turtle
nesting area in south Florida.

The study needs to be repeated with longlines in the open sea to
confirm that light sticks attract turtles under natural conditions in
the ocean, Lohmann said. The researchers are also curious to check
leatherback turtles for a similar response.


(Source: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)

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