Nature © Macmillan Publishers Ltd 1997
T
he most serious danger to dolphins and
porpoises around the world is the threat
from various forms of gill-net fishing. One
potential way to reduce the number of
deaths of marine mammals is the use of
active acoustic alarms to warn animals about
the presence of nets
1
. Until now, acoustic
alarms have not been tested in field experi-
ments with sufficient statistical power
2
. Here
we describe a field experiment showing that
acoustic alarms are effective at reducing the
number of deaths of harbour porpoises
(Phocoena phocoena) in sink gill-nets.
More than 80,000 small cetaceans are
killed annually in coastal waters around the
world, and at least two species (Phocoena
sinus and Lipotes vexillifer) are in imminent
danger of extinction because of fishing
activities
3
. The number of documented
cetacean population collapses due to fishing
activities is probably underestimated
because data are not available from most of
the developing world, where extensive gill-
netting is taking place.
Between 18 October and 15 December
1994, 15 commercial sink gill-net fishers
from the coasts of New Hampshire and
southern Maine took part in our experi-
ment. Strings of 12 nets were tied together.
Each net was roughly 92 m long and 4 m
deep, and had a stretched mesh size of 15 cm.
Whenever possible, the strings were soaked
for 24 h and retrieved daily. Strings were set
at least 100 m apart. Fishing took place on or
near Jeffreys Ledge, New Hampshire, in an
area closed to commercial sink gill-nets
because of previous high incidental catches
of harbour porpoises. Each vessel carried an
independent observer, who changed vessels
regularly throughout the experiment.
We used two visibly identical devices,
some of which produced an acoustic alarm
and others which were silent. Active devices
were equipped with a switch activated by salt
water that triggered the alarm on complete
immersion so that neither fishermen nor
observers knew whether strings had active or
control alarms until the net was hauled. Each
alarm was coded with a number that allowed
us to track battery life, losses, malfunctions
and the identity of alarms in the vicinity of
porpoise by-catches. Thirteen alarms were
placed 92 m apart, attached to the head rope
at the end of each string and at each bridle,
where individual nets were attached to each
other. Each string had either a complete set
of active alarms or a set of control alarms.
The choice of active or control alarms for
each string was made with a coin-toss the
day before the string was retrieved and reset.
Observers carried a new set of dry alarms on
board the vessel each day and replaced the
alarms on strings of nets as they were
retrieved. All alarms were changed on a
string each time it was retrieved.
Active alarms emitted a broad-band sig-
nal with a fundamental frequency of 10 kHz,
and a source level of 132 dB (reference pres-
sure 1 ȖPa, measured at 1 m), well within
the hearing range of harbour porpoises
4
and harbour seals
5
. The signal lasted for
around 300 ms and was repeated every 4 s.
We chose the sound source levels so the
alarms would be audible at 15 dB above
ambient sound levels at 100 m (the length
of one net) and to drop to ambient levels at
300 m. Ambient sound levels in the Jeffreys
Ledge area range from 110 to 118 dB.
A total of 421 active and 423 control
strings were set in similar locations and
water depths with similar soak times. Two
harbour porpoises were captured in active
strings and 25 in control strings. In six con-
trol strings, two porpoises were caught in
the same string; in all other cases only a sin-
gle porpoise was taken. The maximum like-
lihood estimate of P (the probability of
capturing at least one porpoise), was 0.025
for control and 0.0027 for active strings.
These values were significantly different
(ȡ
2
ǃ15.01, Pǃ0.0001).
We captured similar quantities of two
target species of the fishery (cod (Gadus
morhua), tǃǁ0.43, Pǃ0.66 and pollock
(Pollachius virens), tǃ0.23, Pǃ0.82) in
control and active strings, as well as other
commercial species. Of the non-target
species that are important prey for the har-
bour porpoise, silver hake (Merluccius bilin-
earis) catches were similar in control and
active strings (tǃǁ1.80, Pǃ0.08), whereas
Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus) were
captured infrequently, but more often in
control than active strings (ȡ
2
ǃ23.34,
Pǃ0.01). Seals caused damage to the fish
catch with similar frequency in control and
active strings. Two harbour seals (Phoca vit-
ulina) were entangled in active strings and a
single seal was caught in a control string.
At present we do not understand why the
use of alarms produced such a dramatic
reduction in porpoise catches. Studies of
porpoises in a controlled setting suggest that
alarms may alert porpoises to the presence of
nets
6
, so that porpoises avoided the alarms
and were therefore less likely to become
entangled. An alternative hypothesis is that
the effect was a result of the behaviour of
herring, the primary prey of harbour por-
poises in the Gulf of Maine
7
. Post mortem
examination showed that 17 of 19 porpoises
had food remains in their stomachs. The
species found most frequently were Atlantic
herring (14 stomachs) and silver hake (10
stomachs). The presence of intact fish, flesh
and bones, particularly from herring, indi-
cated that many porpoises had been feeding
just before entanglement. Herring were the
only fish to show a significant difference in
catch rate between active and control strings,
with fewer herring taken in strings with
active alarms. Clupeoid fishes have an
unusual capacity for high-frequency hear-
ing
8,9
and it is possible that herring reacted to
the alarms by avoiding the nets, thus reduc-
ing the number of porpoises becoming
entangled while attempting to capture prey.
Our acoustic alarms reduced the inci-
dental catch of harbour porpoises in sink
gill-nets by an order of magnitude. The use
of acoustic alarms would seem to be a
promising method of reducing the number
of harbour porpoises killed in sink gill-nets
in the Gulf of Maine and offers hope for
alleviating the bycatch problem for small
cetaceans worldwide. Recent attempts to
apply our results to local experimental fish-
eries have not been rigorously controlled,
and some have produced mixed results, so
the testing of alarms in other situations
where odontocetes are threatened by gill-
nets should proceed with careful experi-
mental design and appropriate controls.
Scott D. Kraus
New England Aquarium,
Edgerton Research Laboratory, Central Wharf,
Boston, Massachusetts 02110, USA
e-mail: skraus@neaq.org
Andrew J. Read
Duke University Marine Laboratory,
Beaufort, North Carolina 28516, USA
Andrew Solow
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,
Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, USA
Ken Baldwin
Department of Ocean Engineering,
University of New Hampshire, Durham,
New Hampshire 03824, USA
Trevor Spradlin
Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service,
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910, USA
Eric Anderson, John Williamson
New Hampshire Commercial Fishermen’s
Association, Rye, New Hampshire 03780, USA
R. Barnaby, P. Ruell, K. Gestring and S. Drew facilitated data
collection aboard the fishing vessels.
1. Jefferson, T. A. & Curry, B. Biol. Conserv. 67, 167–183 (1994).
2. Dawson, S. M. Rep. Int. Whaling Commiss. 15, 573–578 (1994).
3. Perrin, W. F., Donovan, G. P. & Barlow, J. (eds) Rep. Int.
Whaling Commiss. Spec. Iss. 15 (1994).
4. Andersen, S. Invest. Cetacea 2, 256–259 (1970).
5. Møhl, B. J. Aud. Res. 8, 27–38 (1968).
6. Kastelein, R. A., Goodson, A. D., Lien, J. & de Haan, D. in
Harbour Porpoises: Laboratory Studies to Reduce Bycatch (eds
Nachtigall, P. E., Lien, J., Au, W. W. L. & Read, A. J.) 157–167
(De Spil, Woerden, 1995).
7. Recchia, C. R. & Read, A. J. Can. J. Zool. 67, 2140–2146 (1989).
8. Enger, P. S. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 22, 527–538 (1967).
9. Popper, A. N. & Platt, C. Nature 280, 832–833 (1979).
NATURE | VOL 388 | 7 AUGUST 1997 525
Acoustic alarms reduce
porpoise mortality
scientific correspondence