Authors
Richard A Phillips, R Gales, GB Baker, MC Double, Marco Favero, Flavio Quintana, Mark L Tasker, Henri Weimerskirch, M Uhart, A Wolfaardt
Publication date
2016/9/1
Source
Biological Conservation
Volume
201
Pages
169-183
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Seabirds are amongst the most globally-threatened of all groups of birds, and conservation issues specific to albatrosses (Diomedeidae) and large petrels (Procellaria spp. and giant petrels Macronectes spp.) led to drafting of the multi-lateral Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels (ACAP). Here we review the taxonomy, breeding and foraging distributions, population status and trends, threats and priorities for the 29 species covered by ACAP. Nineteen (66%) are listed as threatened by IUCN, and 11 (38%) are declining. Most have extensive at-sea distributions, and the greatest threat is incidental mortality (bycatch) in industrial pelagic or demersal longline, trawl or artisanal fisheries, often in both national and international waters. Mitigation measures are available that reduce bycatch in most types of fisheries, but some management bodies are yet to make these mandatory, levels of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RA Phillips, R Gales, GB Baker, MC Double, M Favero… - Biological Conservation, 2016