Bycatch Any fish that crosses the path of a drift net in the ocean may be tangled or caught in the net. This leads to fish species becoming endangered or even extinct. Non-target individuals caught in the net are called
by-catch. In 1994
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (UNFAO) estimated global by-catch rates to be as high as 27 million tons of fish discarded by fisheries each year. Many individuals of non-target species perish as by-catch in the cast of each drift net. As a result, many such species are now endangered. Species caught as by-catch include
sharks,
dolphins,
whales,
turtles,
sea birds, and other
marine mammals. Since nets are placed and may not be retrieved for days, air-breathing mammals that become tangled in the nets drown if they are unable to free themselves. In certain areas, exemption from punitive measure due to the unintentional by-catch of marine mammals, as outlined by the
Marine Mammal Protection Act, is extended to commercial drift fishermen. In the 1990s, drift net fisheries were responsible for 30,000 tons of sharks and skates in global by-catch annually. While filming National Geographic's
Incidental Kill in the
California Channel Islands where
swordfish and various sharks swim north, the divers discovered that many drift net boats had placed nets that night. The nets were one mile long each and nearly high placed to target swordfish and
thresher sharks. They swam half the length of one net and in that length discovered 32 dead
blue sharks in the net as well as 2
hammerhead sharks, a
sea lion, and a
manta ray all of which were thrown back into the ocean when the net was hauled in. Although
long line fisheries are the main contributor to sea bird by-catch, sea birds are also caught in drift nets in significant numbers. Studies conducted on 30 small-scale drift net fisheries in the
Baltic Sea estimate that 90,000 sea birds die annually in drift nets. Bycatch is thrown back to the ocean either dead or with injuries that may result in death. If not eaten, dead animals
decompose, as
bacteria use
oxygen to break down the
organic matter. Large amounts of dead matter decomposing in the ocean causes the surrounding levels of
dissolved oxygen to decrease.
Environmental damage Drift nets lost or abandoned at sea due to storms causing strong currents, accidental loss, or purposeful discard become
ghost nets. Synthetic nets are resistant to rot or breakdown, therefore ghost nets fish indefinitely in the oceans. Marine animals are easily tangled in ghost nets as are the predators the dead animals attract. The float line on the net allows it to be pushed in the current which causes
ecological damage to plant life and
substrate habitats as the nets drag the sea floor. In addition, oceanic
microplastics pollution is largely caused by plastic-made fishing gear like drift nets, that are wearing down by use, lost or thrown away.
Illegal fishing Most countries have jurisdiction over the waters within 200 nautical miles of their shores, called the
exclusive economic zone, set by the
Law of the Sea. Outside these boundaries lie
international waters, or the
high seas. While fishing in international waters, vessels must comply with regulations of the country in whose flag they fly, but there are no enforcers on the high seas. International waters make up 50% of the world's surface, yet are its least protected habitat. Declining fish stocks have caused
illegal fishing practices to increase. Illegal, unregulated, or unreported fishing catch between 11 and 26 million tons a year which accounts for one quarter of global catch. Illegal fishing includes taking undersized fish, fishing in closed waters, taking more fish than permitted, or fishing during seasonal closures. Illegal fishing is prominent due to lack of enforcement or punishments. Despite controls, violations of drift net fishing laws are commonplace. The
Mediterranean Sea is the most overexploited. With 21 modern states with coastline on the sea, there are many fisheries harvesting one small area. When drift net gear was banned, manufacturers modified the design of the nets so they no longer fell under the banned definition. A new definition was established in 2007 as "any gillnet held on the sea surface or at a certain distance below it by floating devices, drifting with the current, either independently or with the boat to which it may be attached. It may be equipped with devices aiming to stabilize the net or to limit drift". == Other uses ==