Are drum lines baited?
SMART (Shark Management Alert in Real Time) drum lines involve the use of a baited hook but instead of killing the sharks, the animals are tagged and released offshore.
What is a smart Drumline?
A SMART drumline is non- lethal, and designed to send an alert when a shark has been captured on the line. Anchored to the sea floor, SMART drumlines comprise of two buoys and a satellite-linked GPS communications unit attached to a baited hook.
How many Drumlines are there in NSW?
Common name | Ballina-Lennox Head | Evans Head |
---|---|---|
Spinner Shark | 1 | 0 |
Greynurse Shark | 9 | 33 |
Dusky Whaler | 20 | 3 |
Whaler Shark – unidentified | 2 | 0 |
Are smart Drumlines effective?
Post-release, the distance of the shark from the tagged location to the location of the VR4G was an average of 165km. This provides us with confidence that SMART drumlines are effective in removing the immediate risk to beach users at that beach and other nearby beaches for several months.
What is a lethal drum line?
A drumline is a fishing apparatus that consists of a baited hook suspended from buoys and anchored to the ocean floor. Hook size and design for the trial program were chosen to target large sharks and to minimise bycatch.
Do Drumlines hurt sharks?
Drumlines with baited hooks can cause considerable suffering, especially when sharks are caught for extended periods of time. Non–target sharks as well as other marine animals such as seals, turtles and dolphins can also be caught by the hooks and are likely to be injured and many will die from drowning.
Why are shark nets bad?
Collateral Damage. While shark nets are designed to allow smaller fish through, any number of marine animals, including seals, dolphins, dugongs, and turtles can become twisted up, injured and can even drown in nets. In 2013, a humpback whale calf died after becoming tangled in a shark net off a Sydney beach.
What do Drumlines do to sharks?
A drum line is an unmanned aquatic trap used to lure and capture large sharks using baited hooks. They are typically deployed near popular swimming beaches with the intention of reducing the number of sharks in the vicinity and therefore the probability of shark attack.
What do Drumlines do?
How are SMART drum lines used in NSW?
SMART drum lines have also been used in NSW to catch and tag great white sharks. The West Australian Government has bowed to public pressure and will introduce a trial of so-called SMART drum lines to try to reduce the number of shark attacks along its coastline.
How does the shark drum line in NSW work?
The shark takes the bait and either dies, or, in the case of the “Smart” drum lines being deployed off the coast of NSW, sends a signal back to authorities who then travel to the buoy to collect the shark and either tow it out to sea or kill it.
What are drum lines and what do they do?
Drum lines are a pretty basic fishing device involving a large baited hook attached to a rope (or metal trace) which is then attached to a floating buoy, or the seafloor.
What kind of fish do drum lines catch?
“Drum lines will catch anything that takes the bait, but are probably less indiscriminate than shark nets which will catch things like dolphins, seals, whales, turtles and other charismatic megafauna, as well as smaller harmless sharks and fish,” explains Professor Buxton.