How do we prevent ships from hitting marine animals in their path?

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Photo by Venti Views on Unsplash
Photo by Venti Views on Unsplash

There's plenty more we could be doing to reduce the number of marine animals killed and injured after being hit by ships, according to an opinion piece by international researchers. They say current evidence shows ship strikes could be helping drive declines in marine animal populations, and as shipping networks continue to grow, so does the problem. The researchers say there are simple steps we could take to reduce ship strikes, starting with getting better data on where the most animals are being hit. From there, the researchers say, there is the opportunity to implement speed restrictions and route changes in problem areas.

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From: Springer Nature

Comment: How to curb ship strikes of marine animals

Simple actions can be taken to prevent the deaths of whales, sharks and other ocean giants caused by collisions with ships, argue David Sims and colleagues in a Comment in this week’s Nature. “Humanity and some of the world’s most charismatic wildlife are on a collision course in the oceans,” they write.

The world’s merchant fleet – from oil tankers to bulk cargo carriers and container ships – has doubled in size in just 16 years. Between 2014 and 2050, shipping traffic is expected to rise by up to 1,200%.

These numbers, combined with data on where shipping networks overlap with the movements and aggregations of marine animals, together with assessments of the effects of ship strikes on certain species, present an alarming picture, explain the authors. The data suggest that “ship strikes could be helping to drive the population decline of many animals, leading to profound effects throughout their ecosystems”.

More hopefully, Sims and co-authors argue that, compared with other threats to marine biodiversity such as pollution and climate change, the problem of ship strikes harming wildlife is tractable. In their Comment, they lay out what is needed to address this problem on a global scale: better data on where, when, how often and for which species strikes are occurring; greater engagement with the problem, both from the shipping industry and the public; regulations that either reroute ships or reduce their speed when they travel through certain areas; and the monitoring of adherence to such restrictions.

“Making ship strikes a higher priority globally is one immediately achievable way to help conserve the world’s most vulnerable and iconic marine species,” they conclude.

This press release refers to a Nature Comment piece, not a Nature research paper or article. Comment pieces are topical, authoritative Op-Eds pertaining to scientific research and its ramifications.

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Organisation/s: Marine Biological Association, UK
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