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How the Fishing Industry Can Save Sharks and Seafood with LED Lights

Past studies have documented how LED lights can deter sea turtles from entering fishing nets.

How the Fishing Industry Can Save Sharks and Seafood with LED Lights
French fishing boats returning to the dock. [Photographer: Jeremy Suyker/Bloomberg]

LED lights can save more than energy. A first-of-its kind study found that when attached to fishing nets, they dramatically reduce the incidental killing of sharks and other top predators that help keep marine ecosystems healthy and seafood on dinner plates.

Global shark populations have plummeted 71% since 1970, largely due to overfishing and the inadvertent capture of the species in fishing nets, according to a 2021 paper. The biomass of this “bycatch” of sharks and rays, however, fell 95% when researchers placed green LED lights on more than 16,000 feet of nets off Mexico’s Pacific coast, scientists wrote in a peer-reviewed paper published Thursday in the journal ‘Current Biology.’

The researchers from the United States and Mexico found that overall bycatch declined 63% compared to control nets that were not lighted. That included a 51% drop in the killing of endangered loggerhead turtles and an 81% drop in the capture of giant Humboldt squid, another top predator. That meant that fishers improved their productivity as they spent 57% less time untangling unwanted species from their nets, according to the researchers.

Past studies have documented how LED lights can deter sea turtles from entering fishing nets. But the Mexico research is the first to show how illuminating nets can benefit a range of marine species that are also under pressure from climate change, said Jesse Senko, lead author of the study and an assistant research professor and senior sustainability scientist at Arizona State University.

“The implications are huge,” he said. “These top predators regulate prey populations and transfer nutrients in the marine ecosystem. When you remove them there are a lot of ecological consequences.”

The researchers wrote that it was unclear if sharks and rays are disturbed by the LEDs and avoid nets, or if the illumination allows them to see the nets and steer clear of entanglement.

In Mexico, the LEDs were attached to gillnets, which are vertical walls of fine-mesh material that can stretch for more than a mile and are nearly invisible to marine mammals and fish. Senko said experiments indicate that LEDs are also effective when attached to other types of nets.

Senko said that fishers in Mexico embraced the LEDs as the drop in bycatch allowed them to return to port faster and more profitably sell their catch as it was fresher.

Still, obstacles to the widespread deployment of the lights remain. Each LED costs about $7 and runs on batteries that must be frequently replaced by fishers. “That's a huge recurring operational cost for them,” said Senko.

He and his colleagues have developed a solar-powered LED that can operate for a week on an hour of sunlight and is currently being tested in Mexico.

Michel Kaiser, a professor of fisheries conservation and chief scientist at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland, was not involved in the research but he said in an email that the study’s results are “very encouraging.”

He said, though, that more research is needed on the impacts of illuminating fishing nets with LEDs.

“There are critical questions that need to be answered — namely what wavelengths of light work best and how do different species respond to different wavelengths,” said Kaiser, who is conducting research with SafetyNet Technologies, a company that makes LEDs for fishing nets. “Some are attracted to light, others are repelled by light — hence this could cause complications in some mixed species fisheries.”

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.