Yellowfin tuna
Thunnus albacares
What to check for
Location
Western and Central Pacific
Technical location
Pacific, Eastern Central, Pacific, Northwest, Pacific, Western Central, All areas, All areas, All areas
Caught by
Hook & line (handline), Hook & line (pole & line)
Certification
Marine Stewardship Council (MSC)
Rating summary
Yellowfin tuna in the western and central Pacific Ocean is not overfished or subject to overfishing. Some appropriate management measures are in place. There is no overall catch limit, and catches continue to increase. However, MSC-certified fisheries are taking additional measures to control fishing activity. A small amount of yellowfin tuna in the west Pacific Ocean are caught by pole & line. This is a generally low-impact method.Rating last updated January 2024
Technical consultation summary
Yellowfin tuna in the western and central Pacific Ocean is not overfished or subject to overfishing. A new stock assessment was carried out in 2023 using data up to 2021. Spawning biomass was 47% of unfished levels between 2018-2021, which meets the harvest strategy target to maintain the stock at 2012 - 2015 levels (44% of unfished levels). Fishing mortality for 2017-2020 was 50% of FMSY. Some appropriate management measures are in place to control fishing activity. There is no overall catch limit and catches have increased to record levels, with 2021 being the highest on record (754,442t). Additionally, there has been a sharp increase in juvenile fishing mortality by 24% between 2015 to 2021 (F2015 = 0.22, F2021 = 0.46). However, MSC-certified fisheries are taking additional measures to control fishing activity. A small amount of yellowfin tuna in the west Pacific Ocean are caught by pole & line. This is a generally low-impact method however, pole and line can have impacts on baitfish populations.
How we worked out this Rating
Yellowfin tuna in the western and central Pacific Ocean is not overfished or subject to overfishing.The western and central Pacific Ocean (WCPO) yellowfin tuna stock is managed and assessed by the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC). Fishing for this stock began in the 1950s and catches have steadily increased, peaking in 2021 at around 750,000 tonnes. The WCPO yellowfin tuna fishery is the second largest in the world after WCPO skipjack. The last stock assessment was carried out in 2023 using data up to 2021. The next stock assessment is expected in 2026.Spawning Biomass (SB) continuously declined until the mid-2000s, when it reached around 50% of unfished levels. It has stayed relatively stable since then. The average SB between 2018 – 2021 was 47% of unfished levels and 228% of the level consistent with Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY). The management objective is to maintain the spawning biomass depletion ratio above the average of 2012–2015, which was 44%. There is also a limit reference point (LRP) of 20%. Below this level, the stock would be considered depleted. As the biomass is above the management target and SBMSY, it is not in an overfished state.Since 2015, fishing mortality (F) has sharply increased for juveniles. In 2015, it was 22% of MSY and in 2021 it had increased to 46%. However, it has stabilized for adults. The average F from 2017-2020 was 50% of MSY, an increase on the previous assessment which was 36%. As F is below FMSY, the stock is not subject to overfishing. All models in the assessment indicated that the stock was above SBMSY, and fishing mortality rates below FMSY, with 100% probability. Therefore, it is not overfished, nor subject to overfishing. Assuming fishing effort and catch levels stay at 2018-2021 levels, there is a zero probability of the stock falling below the LRP.There are some research needs to improve the assessment, including estimation of natural mortality rates using tagging data.
Some appropriate management measures are in place. There is no overall catch limit, and catches continue to increase. However, MSC-certified fisheries are taking additional measures to control fishing activity.Tuna and swordfish are highly migratory species, found on the high seas and in numerous countries' waters. This makes harmonised and effective management challenging. Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) are responsible for monitoring and managing these stocks on behalf of the countries that access them. However, the degree to which management is implemented, monitored and enforced by each country varies significantly. It is important that commercial buyers choose tuna that has been caught by vessels that are well regulated by their flag state.This stock is managed and assessed by the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC). Some stocks overlap with the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC). The IATTC and WCPFC endeavour to work together to promote compatibility between their respective conservation and management measures across the Pacific, but this is not always achieved. Over 50% of western and central Pacific yellowfin tuna catches are certified by the Marine Stewardship Council. Certified fisheries must meet additional auditing and traceability requirements that result in improved monitoring. The largest certification is the Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA) purse seine fishery. These South Pacific island nations have additional management beyond the WCPFC measures outlined below, including a Vessel Day Scheme that limits total fishing effort across the islands and near-real-time monitoring of effort and catch. Certifications for all the fisheries are conditional on developing Harvest Control Rules for the stock, which is dependent on action by the WCPFC.The WCPFC has not yet set a target size for the yellowfin stock, although work is underway to achieve this. In the interim, for 2022-2024 there is a harvest strategy that aims to maintain the stock at 2012-2015 average levels, which is 44% of unfished biomass. The 2018-2021 spawning biomass was 47% of unfished levels. There is no explicit target for fishing mortality.There is no Total Allowable Catch. Instead, management is mainly aimed at limiting fishing effort by purse seiners, which are responsible for around 53% of the yellowfin catch. Each country has set their own catch or effort limits for purse seining within their own waters. On the high seas in the tropics (between 20 degrees N and S), each country is allowed to fish for a set number of days. Fishing effort (in days) in the areas outside of this should not increase. Purse seiners must retain and land all bigeye, skipjack, and yellowfin tuna. This is intended to incentivise reductions in bycatch of juvenile fish. Yellowfin catches by other fishing gears are frozen to 2004 levels.This has not prevented catches from increasing. The catch in 2004 was 600,000t. The 2016-2020 average is 700,000t with 2021 seeing the highest catch on record at 754,442t. Management is not, therefore, controlling fishing pressure on the stock. WCPFC has also noted that further increases in fishing mortality are likely to impact other stocks and species due to multispecies and gear interactions.There are also restrictions on the use of drifting fish aggregation devices (dFADs) - floating objects which purse seiners use to attract tuna and increase catches. Each purse seine vessel is limited to 350 dFADs at a time. FADs are banned from July-September, with an additional 2-month closure in parts of the southwest Pacific islands. VMS polling frequency increases to every 30 minutes during the FAD closure.Additional measures for all newly deployed FADs came into place in January 2024. This includes prohibiting mesh netting on any part of a FAD, and only allowing non-entangling materials and designs for raft covers and subsurface structures. Decisions on implementation of biodegradable FAD requirements are scheduled for no later than 2026. Currently, biodegradable and non-plastic materials are encouraged but not required. There is uncertainty about the level of compliance and effectiveness of these new regulations due to varying observer coverage and the recent date of implantation.Observers, to verify catch and bycatch, are required on 100% of purse seiners between 20 degrees N and S, but are low for other areas and gear types at just 5%. These observer levels have not been routinely met, peaking in 2018 and 2019 at 90% for purse seine and 6% for longline. In 2021 observer coverage fell to below 10% and 4% for purse seine and longline fisheries due to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and lonely slightly improved in 2022. Scientific recommendations are for 20%.To help address illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing, the WCPFC maintains an IUU Vessel List, prohibits transhipments at sea between purse seiners (some exemptions apply) and requires all other transhipments to be documented and 100% observed as part of the regional observer programme. In 2017 a Compliance Monitoring Scheme was introduced to assess and improve compliance with obligations, and penalise non-compliance.
A small amount of yellowfin tuna in the west Pacific Ocean are caught by pole & line. This is a generally low-impact method.Pole & line accounts for about 3% of the total yellowfin catch in the western and central Pacific Ocean (WCPO) (around 20,000t tonnes in 2022). A small proportion comes from MSC-certified fleets. This includes 3,108 tonnes from hook and line and 2,710 tonnes from handlining.This method targets fish near the surface, and so rarely touches the seabed, reducing the risk of habitat impacts. It is labour-intensive and very selective, meaning there are low levels of bycatch of vulnerable species. It involves fishing with rods, using live bait to attract the tuna. The baitfish, usually small pelagic species such as sardines or anchovy, are caught and stored alive nearby or on the boats.If not well managed, this method can have impacts on baitfish populations. Better monitoring and data collection is required in order to mitigate this impact. Some of the pole and line catch is from MSC-certified fleets. These fleets are taking extra measures, including increased monitoring of catches and bycatch. However, information on the use of bait species, and impacts on those populations, is lacking.Some pole and line fishing in the Pacific uses anchored Fish Aggregation Devices (FADs). FADs are floating objects that tuna and other species tend to aggregate around. In contrast with the drifting FADs (dFADs) of the major tuna fisheries, anchored FADs are less likely to be lost at sea and contribute to ghost fishing or marine debris. There is also less concern for bycatch, although it it may still occur.
References
Blyth-Skyrme, R., McLoughlin K., and Japp, D., 2018. Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) Public Certification Report: PNA Western and Central Pacific skipjack and yellowfin, unassociated / non FAD set, tuna purse seine fishery. March 2018. Prepared by Acoura Marine Ltd on behalf of Parties to Nauru Agreement (PNA) Office. 441p. Available at https://fisheries.msc.org/en/fisheries/pna-western-and-central-pacific-skipjack-yellowfin-and-bigeye-tuna-purse-seine-fishery-fad-and-non-fad-sets/@@assessments [Accessed on 25.01.2022].Blyth-Skyrme, R., Alvarez, C., and Japp, D. 2023. Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) Fourth Surveillance Report: PNA Western and Central Pacific skipjack and yellowfin, unassociated / non FAD set, tuna purse seine fishery. June 2023. Prepared by Acoura Marine t/a LRQA on behalf of Parties to Nauru Agreement (PNA). Available at https://fisheries.msc.org/en/fisheries/pna-western-and-central-pacific-skipjack-and-yellowfin-unassociated-non-fad-set-tuna-purse-seine-fishery/@@assessments [Accessed on 25.01.2024].Criquet. G., and Gasciogne, J., 2023. Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) Second Surveillance Audit Report: Indonesia pole-and-line and handline, skipjack and yellowfin tuna of Western and Central Pacific archipelagic waters. October 2023. Prepared by Global Trust Certification on behalf of Asosiasi Perikanan Pole & Line Dan Handline Indonesia/Indonesian Pole & Line and Handline Association (AP2HI). 27p. Available athttps://fisheries.msc.org/en/fisheries/indonesia-pole-and-line-and-handline-skipjack-and-yellowfin-tuna-of-western-and-central-pacific-archipelagic-waters/@@assessments [Accessed on 30.01.2024]Dignan, S., Gascoigne, J. and Halim, A., 2021. Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) Public Certification Report: Indonesia pole-and-line and handline, skipjack and yellowfin tuna of Western and Central Pacific archipelagic waters. January 2021. Prepared by Global Trust Certification on behalf of Asosiasi Perikanan Pole & Line Dan Handline Indonesia/Indonesian Pole & Line and Handline Association (AP2HI). 360p. Available at https://fisheries.msc.org/en/fisheries/indonesia-pole-and-line-and-handline-skipjack-and-yellowfin-tuna-of-western-and-central-pacific-archipelagic-waters/@@assessments [Accessed on 25.01.2022].Hare S.R., Williams P.G., Castillo Jordán C., Day, J., Hamer P.A., Hampton W.J., Macdonald, J., Magnusson, A., Scutt Phillips, J., Scott R.D., Senina, I., Pilling G.M. 2023. The western and central Pacific tuna fishery: 2022 overview and status of stocks. Tuna Fisheries Assessment Report no. 23. Noumea, New Caledonia: Pacific Community. 68 p. Available at https://purl.org/spc/digilib/doc/to3vf [Accessed on 23.01.2024].IPNLF, 2012. Ensuring sustainability of livebait fish, International Pole and Line Foundation, London, 57 pp. Available at https://ipnlf.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/ensuring-sustainability-of-livebait-fish-reportipnlfrocliffe-printable-04-12-12-.pdf.ISSF, IPNLF, 2019. Skippers' Guidebook to Pole-and-Line Fishing Best Practices. First Edition, 2019. A Joint Publication by the International Seafood Sustainability Foundation and International Pole & Line Foundation. Available at https://www.iss-foundation.org/issf-downloads/download-info/issf-ipnlf-skippers-guidebook-to-pole-and-line-fishing-best-practices/ [Accessed on 16.12.2021].Magnusson A., Day J., Teears T., Hampton J., Davies N., Castillo Jord´an C., Peatman T., Scot R., Scutt Phillips J., McKechnie S., Scott F., Yao N., Natadra R., Pilling G., Williams P., Hamer P., 2023. Stock assessment of yellowfin tuna in the western and central Pacific Ocean: 2023. Scientific Committee 19th Regular Session, Koror, Palau 16–24 August 2023. Available at https://meetings.wcpfc.int/node/19352 [Accessed on 23.01.2024].WCPFC, 2024. Conservation and Management Measures (CMMs) and Resolutions of the Western Central Pacific Fisheries Commission. Compiled 18 Jan 2024 – 11:07. Available at https://cmm.wcpfc.int/sites/default/files/compiled-conservation-measures-and-resolutions.pdf?_dl=1 [Accessed on 23.01.2024].WCPFC, 2022. Indicative workplan for the adoption of Harvest strategies under CMM 2022-03 (formerly CMM 2014-06). 19th Regular Session of the Commission, Da Nang, Vietnam, 27 November –3 December 2022. Available at https://meetings.wcpfc.int/file/14129/download [Accessed on 23.01.2024].WCPFC, 2022. Reference Document for Bigeye, Yellowfin and Skipjack tuna for the Review of CMM 2021-01 and Development of Harvest Strategies under CMM 2014-06. 19th Regular Session of the Commission, Da Nang, Vietnam, 27 November –3 December 2022. Available at https://meetings.wcpfc.int/node/18124 [Accessed on 23.01.2024].
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