Concern is growing about the huge number of seabirds being killed by fisheries in the North Atlantic and the Mediterranean, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) said yesterday.
Although conservationists' fears have so far focused on seabirds in the Southern Ocean, especially albatrosses, there is mounting alarm over the numbers of northern species, such as shearwaters and petrels, falling victim to large-scale industrialised fishing methods.
The most deadly of these is longlining, which involves hooks set with bait on lines which stream out for great distances behind fishing vessels. Seabirds swoop on the bait when it is on the surface, before being hooked themselves as a so-called "bycatch".
It is estimated that 200,000 seabirds are being killed in fisheries in European waters every year with one species, the great shearwater, suffering an exceptionally high annual bycatch rate of 50,000 birds in the Spanish longline hake fishery to the west of Ireland.
Europe's rarest seabird, the Balearic shearwater, critically endangered with a population of just 2,000 pairs, is predicted to become extinct within 40 years if losses continue.
The Cory's shearwater may suffer an annual bycatch rate of up to 10 per cent of the population in longline fisheries off Malta.
The RSPB and BirdLife International are calling on the European Commission to implement an EU Community Plan of Action for reducing the incidental catch of seabirds in fisheries.
"Europe is incredibly important for seabirds, with some species occurring nowhere else, and this is a situation that Europe must tackle urgently," said RSPB spokesman Grahame Madge.
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Rare seabirds falling victim to longline fishing industry
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