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IMAGE Traces of the offshore fishing
  Traces of the offshore fishing trawlers around Phu Quoc Island

 

Wide swathe MERIS image
 

Wide swathe MERIS image captures terrestrial and marine features of Southeast Asia.

Click on the images to enlarge

Tracing off shore trawling activities

The various reviews of marine fisheries in the waters off mainland Southeast Asia identify a wide variety of serious threats. These can be categorized mainly as excess fishing effort and habitat destruction. Excess fishing effort, unregulated foreign fishing activity and associated declines in abundance of target species is thought to be a serious problem for most marine fisheries in these waters. Habitat destruction is another threat to coastal-marine resources. For example, the use of trawling gear is believed to have negative impacts on the sea floor ecology. Not much information is available regarding this important topic.

Recent satellite imagery can help to shed some light on the extent and severity of trawling in the offshore and near-shore zone of the Mekong delta. On February 6, 2007, the European Space Agency’s Envisat satellite passed over the southern tip of mainland Southeast Asia and the MERIS sensor imaged the Mekong Delta and the surrounding coastal waters of the South China Sea and the Gulf of Thailand.

A digitally enhanced MERIS image of the area around Phu Quoc Island (upper left) provides clear evidence of numerous linear traces of mud clouds associated with the tracks of various offshore fishing trawlers that are active in these relatively shallow and sediment-rich waters. The red circles highlight some of these areas of seabed disturbance. The light-coloured traces correspond to plumes of stirred-up sediment that is disturbed by the heavy steel cables, trawl doors and other heavy trawl net equipment scraping over the seafloor.

The entire Envisat MERIS image covers a swathe more than 1000 km wide (lower left) showing many terrestrial and marine features, including the dry season crop land (brown), the fertile flood plain of the Mekong river and forested mountains (green), and the coastal waters (blue).

These mud trails can be seen on a variety of satellite imagery and Google Earth tour has been put together by Kyle Van Houtan. If you have Google Earth installed on your computer and a good Internet connection, you can see some other mudtrails. For further information, click here.

Leading scientists have claimed that ‘bottom trawling and use of other mobile fishing gear have effects on the seabed that resemble forest clear-cutting, a terrestrial disturbance recognized as a major threat to biological diversity and economic sustainability’. Although benthic structures are clearly much smaller than those in forests, their complexity is equally essential for biodiversity. Researchers are starting to use satellite images from many offshore and near-shore areas around the globe to show fleets of trawlers leaving plumes of mud behind them like contrails. Such imagery can focus wider attention on trawling damage, and on the possible uses of satellites to monitor fishing.

Credits:
ESA (MERIS image)
BBC News (Bottom trawling graphic)