Mail & Guardian

Fishing lines and nets harm seals

- Sheree Bega

Entangleme­nt in plastic pollution, mainly discarded fishing lines and nets, is causing horrific injuries to hundreds of Cape fur seals every year.

These are the findings from an ongoing project, which started in 2018, to investigat­e the effects of pollution on Cape fur seals in Namibia. The seals are the most common marine mammal observed around the coastline of South Africa and Namibia, where they are endemic.

The research was led by a team of researcher­s and conservati­onists from Stellenbos­ch University, the Sea Search-namibian Dolphin Project and Ocean Conservati­on Namibia.

The findings, published in the scientific journal Marine Pollution Bulletin, show that rates of entangleme­nt were about one per 500 animals and similar between the two colonies investigat­ed at Walvis Bay and Cape Cross.

Of the 347 entangled animals documented, the disentangl­ement team, led by Naudé Dreyer of Ocean Conservati­on Namibia, were able to successful­ly disentangl­e 191 individual­s between 2018 and March 2020.

The results, says the team, “support the global view that the primary cause of entangleme­nt in seals, particular­ly fur seals, is fishing material”.

Pups and juveniles were most commonly affected, by being entangled around the neck by fishing lines. Within the life cycle of Cape fur seals, there are periods in which interactio­n with marine waste is likely to be higher.

“Juveniles in this study exhibited

the highest number of entangleme­nts. This may be attributed to a more curious nature in younger seals, whereby they likely ‘play’ with waste material like they would with kelp,” according to the research.

Immature seals, which do not yet have the dive capabiliti­es of adults, are more likely to interact with waste close to their colony as they explore and develop their foraging skills, but they can also fit into material made of finer mesh because of their size.

It is clear, according to the paper, that the overlap between human habitation and intense fishing activity or

the accrual of marine debris through ocean currents “results in areas with high rates of entangleme­nts”.

Although the rate of entangleme­nt observed at the colonies does not appear to be negatively affecting the global population size, which has remained relatively stable since the early 1990s, entangleme­nt has a clear effect on individual animal welfare.

“Most entangleme­nts identified … were classified as ‘slight’ injuries, with no visible skin wounds. These milder injuries have the potential to progress into more severe injuries, especially as the animals grow, and

should thus remain targets of disentangl­ement efforts,” the paper says.

The relatively small number of “very severe” cases is likely because seals exhibiting these injuries are at a higher risk of mortality and may not be observed because of increased time at sea or “dying unseen”.

For now, entangleme­nt material can only be identified to broad industry and not specific companies, but the informatio­n in the paper “provides a useful starting point to engage with the key industries to decrease pollution in the bay”, according to the authors.

 ?? Photo: Sanjay Kanojia/afp ?? Liquid playground: A child jumps into floodwater­s after heavy monsoon rains swelled the Ganges and Yamuna rivers and caused flooding in the Jhusi area of Allahabad, India, earlier this month.
Photo: Sanjay Kanojia/afp Liquid playground: A child jumps into floodwater­s after heavy monsoon rains swelled the Ganges and Yamuna rivers and caused flooding in the Jhusi area of Allahabad, India, earlier this month.
 ?? Photo: Tess Gridley ?? Wounded: This Cape fur sale was injured after getting entangled in a plastic fishing line or net.
Photo: Tess Gridley Wounded: This Cape fur sale was injured after getting entangled in a plastic fishing line or net.

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