News

Sea Shepherd and Italian Authorities Seize 19km of Illegal Nets, Free Four Endangered Devil Rays

Tuesday, 23 Jun, 2026

Sea Shepherd has launched the ninth season of Operation SISO in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea of Italy, opening the campaign with a 72-hour joint operation alongside Italy's Guardia di Finanza and Coast Guard. Carried out off the coast of Calabria earlier this month, the operation led to the seizure of 19 kilometres of illegal driftnets and the release of four endangered devil rays, an ocean sunfish, and a loggerhead sea turtle, all found alive and entangled in the fishing gear.

SEa Shepherd crew pulling up ropes with fish traps attached. Photo Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global

The discovery began on June 6th, when Sea Shepherd's vessel Sea Eagle received a report from the Guardia di Finanza's Operational Aeronaval Unit – the maritime branch of Italy's financial police, which patrols Italian waters for trafficking and customs violations – of an illegal driftnet sighting. The crew arrived to discover two dead Mobula mobular, giant devil rays that can grow to more than three metres across, strangled by the driftnet with 45-centimetre mesh, a type of gear banned across the Mediterranean since 2002. A day earlier, in the same waters, the crew had pulled in a separate abandoned net containing three dead dolphins, including a 90-centimetre newborn calf.

Endangered devil ray caught in a gillnet. Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global
Sea Shepherd crew free a devil ray caught in a gillnet. Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global
Releasing a loggerhead turtle back into the sea. Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global
Cutting free the animals caught in the illegal driftnet. Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global

A Coordinated Response

The mesh, floats, and buoys matched what crews had found in the net that killed the two rays, a sign that this was no isolated net but a far larger illegal system. Recognising the scale of what was at stake, the Guardia di Finanza's Operational Aeronaval Unit, the Italian Coast Guard, and Sea Shepherd's vessels Sea Eagle and Spitfire launched three days of continuous, round-the-clock patrols along the Calabrian coast to track it down.

By the time the operation wrapped, the joint patrol had pulled 19 kilometres of driftnets with 45-centimetre mesh out of the water and freed four Mobula mobular devil rays, an ocean sunfish (Mola mola), and a loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta), all of them alive. 

Italian Coastguard oversees the confiscation of illegal longlines and hooks. Photo Germana C. Lavagna/Sea Shepherd Global
The Italian Coast Guard with Sea Shepherd's Spitfire. Photo Germana C. Lavagna/Sea Shepherd Global
Working with the Guardia di Finanza to confiscate illegal fishing gear. Photo Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global

Why the Tyrrhenian Sea, Why Now

Operation SISO patrols the southern Tyrrhenian Sea, the stretch of Mediterranean off Italy's west coast between Sicily, Calabria, and the mainland, through the Atlantic Bluefin Tuna's spawning season each June and July. The species suffered an 80% collapse in spawning biomass between the 1970s and 2010s, and while international recovery plans have allowed numbers to rebound, crews are once again sighting tuna over 250 kilos in these waters, a single illegal longline set during spawning season can undo years of that progress in one night.

Driftnets, longlines, and abandoned FADs (Fish Aggregating Devices, floating structures used to lure fish that are often left adrift after use) don't only threaten tuna. They indiscriminately catch sharks, turtles, dolphins, and rays, and contribute heavily to plastic pollution in Italian waters: Sea Shepherd estimates more than 1,500 FADs are illegally anchored in the region every year.

Sea Shepherd crew working through the night to haul in 19km of illegal fishing nets. Photo by Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global

Nine Years of Operation SISO

This year marks the campaign's ninth consecutive season. Operation SISO is named for a young sperm whale found dead in the Aeolian Islands in 2017 after becoming entangled in an illegal driftnet; his skeleton is now displayed at the MuMa museum in Milazzo, not far from where this year's operation took place, as a reminder of what's at stake. Since the campaign began in 2018, Sea Shepherd Italia has worked alongside the Coast Guard and Guardia di Finanza to remove illegal gear from the Tyrrhenian Sea, a partnership the organisation credits with a 70% drop in illegal fishing activity in the area since 2022.

Unloading the confiscated fishing gear in Vibo Valentia. Photo by Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global

The Season So Far

Beyond this week's operation, Operation SISO9 has already logged a wider set of results since launch, as crews continue daily patrols of the coastline:

* 15 km of illegal longlines, carrying close to 400 hooks, seized by Spitfire
* One illegal 100-hook longline targeting Bluefin Tuna found with a dead 270-kg adult still on the line
* 4 heavily polluting FADs removed by Sea Eagle
* Additional kilometres of abandoned driftnet, recovered and safely disposed

"The ocean is the original matrix of life and an essential natural infrastructure for global equilibrium. What we witnessed on June 6 off the coast of Calabria was a carnage. What we did in the three days that followed — together with the Guardia di Finanza and the Coast Guard, in an uninterrupted operation, night and day — is the response this sea demands and deserves. Nineteen kilometres of nets removed. Four rays free. A turtle swimming. We do not use these figures as rhetoric: they are lives, they are facts, and they are proof that the model of cooperation between law enforcement agencies and conservation organisations works. But it is not enough. Those who know must speak. Those who fish illegally and are shielded by the silence of those ashore have no right to be at sea."

Andrea Morello, President of Sea Shepherd Italy.
The confiscated fishing gear stacked on the deck of the Sea Eagle. Photo by Florian S Schmidt/Sea Shepherd Global

Sea Eagle and Spitfire will remain on patrol in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea through the Bluefin Tuna spawning season, working in direct coordination with Italian authorities to locate and remove illegal fishing gear before it can cause further harm.

Share this
Take Action for the Oceans!

We Need Your Support