FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI Mitigating Bycatch: Novel Insights to Multidisciplinary Approaches BT AF SQUIRES, Dale BALLANCE, Lisa T. DAGORN, Laurent DUTTON, Peter H. LENT, Rebecca AS 1:1;2:2;3:1;4:3;5:4; FF 1:;2:;3:;4:;5:; C1 NOAA Fisheries, Southwest Fisheries Sci Ctr, La Jolla, CA 92037 USA. Oregon State Univ, Marine Mammal Inst, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA. Inst Rech Dev IRD, UMR 248, MARBEC, Sete, France. Int Whaling Commiss, Cambridge, England. C2 NOAA, USA UNIV OREGON STATE, USA IRD, FRANCE INT WHALING COMMISS, UK UM MARBEC IN WOS Cotutelle UMR DOAJ copubli-europe copubli-int-hors-europe IF 5.247 TC 17 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00695/80671/84598.pdf LA English DT Article DE ;bycatch;biodiversity mitigation hierarchy;inter-disciplinary;conservation;regulation AB Fisheries bycatch conservation and management can be analyzed and implemented through the biodiversity mitigation hierarchy using one of four basic approaches: (1) private solutions, including voluntary, moral suasion, and intrinsic motivation; (2) direct or ?command-and-control? regulation starting from the fishery management authority down to the vessel; (3) incentive-or market-based to alter producer and consumer behavior and decision-making; and (4) hybrid of direct and incentive-based regulation through liability laws. Lessons can be learned from terrestrial and energy conservation, water management, forestry, and atmospheric pollution measures, such as the use of offsets, tradeable rights to externalities, and liability considerations. General bycatch conservation and management principles emerge based on a multidisciplinary approach and a wide array of private and public measures for incentivizing bycatch mitigation. ABSTRACT Bycatch refers most often to those species incidentally taken in fishing operations aimed at other (target) species. Bycatch in this paper refers to species accidentally caught other than the target species, brought on board, dead or alive, and that can therefore be either released alive, discarded dead, or landed. Bycatch can be other finfish (including undersized target species), protected species (fishes, sea turtles, marine mammals, and seabirds), live corals, or sponge reefs. We include habitat impact (Holland and Schnier, 2006; Driscoll et al., 2017) with bycatch (hereafter simply bycatch). Central to this paper is the fact that bycatch species and living habitats include vulnerable, threatened, endangered, protected or otherwise emblematic species for which the take should be minimized. Bycatch in this paper is extended to include habitat impact. ABSTRACT Fisheries bycatch conservation and management can be analyzed and implemented through the biodiversity mitigation hierarchy using one of four basic approaches: (1) private solutions, including voluntary, moral suasion, and intrinsic motivation; (2) direct or ?command-and-control? regulation starting from the fishery management authority down to the vessel; (3) incentive- or market-based to alter producer and consumer behavior and decision-making; and (4) hybrid of direct and incentive-based regulation through liability laws. Lessons can be learned from terrestrial and energy conservation, water management, forestry, and atmospheric pollution measures, such as the use of offsets, tradeable rights to externalities, and liability considerations. General bycatch conservation and management principles emerge based on a multidisciplinary approach and a wide array of private and public measures for incentivizing bycatch mitigation. PY 2021 PD MAR SO Frontiers In Marine Science SN 2296-7745 PU Frontiers Media Sa VL 8 UT 000635455300001 DI 10.3389/fmars.2021.613285 ID 80671 ER EF