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Fishing gear

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entangling fish of a larger size range. effective for flatfishes, rays, crustaceans ... dependent of species, bait type & size, fish length and water temperature ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fishing gear


1
Fishing gear methodsChapter 5 in Jennings et
al.
  • Traps
  • Hooks and Lines
  • Stationary nets
  • Towed nets and dredges
  • Surrounding nets
  • Fish aggregation devices
  • Destructive effects
  • Gear selectivity

2
Type of gear and method used
  • Dependent on species fishing

3
Type of gear and method used
  • Dependent on species fishing
  • Gear types
  • passive
  • inexpensive and less damage to habitat

4
Type of gear and method used
  • Dependent on species fishing
  • Gear types
  • passive
  • inexpensive and less damage to habitat
  • active
  • more expensive, but more efficient

5
Type of gear and method used
  • Dependent on species fishing
  • Gear types
  • Accounting for fish behavior
  • tend to be most efficient methods

6
Type of gear and method used
  • Dependent on species fishing
  • Gear types
  • Accounting for fish behavior
  • Choice of gear depends on intended market
  • presentability of line-caught fish vs.
    gill-netted fish

7
Traps
  • Encourage entry and prevent escape

8
Traps
  • Encourage entry and prevent escape
  • baited traps
  • carnivorous species
  • eels, snappers, breams

Eel trap
9
Traps
  • Encourage entry and prevent escape
  • baited traps
  • control through regulating
  • size of mesh
  • number and position of openings

Minnow trap
10
Traps
  • Encourage entry and prevent escape
  • baited traps
  • unbaited
  • resembling a refuge

11
Traps
  • Encourage entry and prevent escape
  • baited traps
  • unbaited
  • barrier or fence traps

12
Traps
  • Encourage entry and prevent escape
  • baited traps
  • unbaited
  • barrier or fence traps
  • especially in estuaries (taking advantage of
    tides)
  • sardine, mackerel, eel, squid, yellow tail
  • control through regulating ( used)

13
Barrier net
14
Hook and line
  • Hand-held
  • J-hook
  • recreational
  • circle hook
  • commercial
  • shark, halibut, deep water snappers

15
Hook and line
  • Hand-held
  • Trolling
  • Towed behind boats to catch PELAGIC species
  • tuna, mackerel, dolphinfish
  • simulating injured prey or use of bait

16
  • Longlines
  • set near surface for pelagic fish (e.g. tuna)
  • set near seafloor for demersal fish (e.g. sharks)
  • typically in open ocean up to100km long fishing
    to 400 m depth

17
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18
Stationary Nets
  • Passive gear
  • Regulations
  • mesh size
  • number of vessels deploying

19
Stationary Nets
  • Gill nets
  • used in shallow water for mackerel,mullet, shad
  • used in deeper water for demersal fish such as
    sharks

20
Stationary Nets
  • Gill nets
  • very selective fishing gear (see Box 5.4)

European sea bass
21
Stationary Nets
  • Gill nets
  • very selective fishing gear
  • but, responsible for bycatches of marine mammals,
    reptiles and birds

22
Stationary Nets
  • Trammel nets
  • small mesh net sandwiched loosely between panels
    of larger-mesh net
  • entangling fish of a larger size range
  • effective for flatfishes, rays, crustaceans

23
Stationary Nets
  • Trammel nets

24
Stationary Nets
  • Tangle nets
  • large mesh
  • animals get snagged on mesh
  • effective for spiny organisms

25
Towed nets and dredges
  • Active gear

26
Towed nets and dredges
  • Active gear
  • most widely used

27
Towed nets and dredges
  • Active gear
  • most widely used
  • incredibly unselective

28
Towed nets and dredges
  • Otter trawls
  • otter boards, floats
  • demersal or pelagic species
  • fishing speed

29
Towed nets and dredges
  • Beam trawl
  • Horizontal beam
  • Any speed
  • Shrimp, flatfish

30
Towed nets and dredges
  • Dredges
  • Similar to beam trawls
  • Scallops, clams, gastropods

31
Towed nets and dredges
  • Dredges
  • Destroy habitat
  • Reduced bycatch

32
Surrounding nets
  • Take advantage of schooling behavior
  • clupeids, tuna, etc.

33
Surrounding nets
  • Beach seine
  • sardine, mackerel, flat fish

34
Surrounding nets
  • Purse seine
  • efficient gear
  • over 100 tons captured in single haul
  • located with sonar or helicopter then...

35
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36
Aggregation devices
  • Take advantage of congregation behavior
  • Floating rafts anchored offshore to attract
    pelagic fish (depths gt1000m)

37
Aggregation devices
  • Advantages
  • reduce search time
  • reducing fuel costs
  • increase fish catch

38
Aggregation devices
  • Disadvantage
  • costs (3000/unit in 1990)
  • lifespan less than 1 year

39
Other techniques
  • spears, poles
  • diving
  • poison
  • explosives

40
Destructive effects
  • Development of gear aimed at reducing catch of
    small and non-target individuals

41
Destructive effects
  • Exclusion devices (TEDs)
  • Trawl Efficiency Devices
  • Trash Eradication Devices
  • Turtle Exclusion Devices

Fig 5.13
42
Destructive effects
  • Ecological Effects
  • e.g. on food chains (krill fishing on stocks of
    whales)

43
Destructive effects
  • Physical damage (easy to assess)
  • demersal trawl nets and dredges
  • prevent settlement of benthos

44
Destructive effects
  • Effect on escaped individuals?

45
Destructive effects
  • Effect on escaped individuals?
  • assumptions fish escaping are
  • not damaged
  • minimally stressed
  • make a complete recovery

46
Destructive effects
  • Effect on escaped individuals?
  • escaped fish mortality due to
  • physical damage
  • stress
  • decreased ability to escape predators or resist
    disease
  • growth reproductive capacity impaired

47
Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
  • Highly variable depending on fishing method and
    study conducted

48
Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
  • Trawl
  • 1-32 mortality of cod escaping codend
  • 16-17 mortality of fish later released

49
Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
  • Seines
  • 85 mortality of those released due to forced
    swimming, struggling injury

50
Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
  • Trolling
  • 40-86 and 34-52 of chinook coho

51
Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
  • Gillnet escapees
  • 80-100 mortality
  • due to scale damage alone 40
  • due to stress 80

52
Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
  • Catch release
  • dependent of species, bait type size, fish
    length and water temperature
  • 0 when lure in mouth, 11 when swallowed

53
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Stage chosen for a recruitment index depends on
    consistent (precise) and verifiable measures

54
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • consistent and verifiable measures depend on
    sampling gear used

55
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • In addition to recruitment ogive, must consider
    selectivity ogive

100
recruitment
Recruited
resultant
selectivity
0
Age or size
56
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • selectivity ogive

Fig 9.7
57
Logistic Curve (p. 187)
58
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity

59
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity
  • fish girth

60
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity
  • mesh size

61
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity
  • gear avoidance capabilities

62
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity
  • recruitment size

63
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity
  • fish behaviour (schooling, diel)

64
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity
  • day or night deployment

65
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity
  • is gear sampling random portion

66
Recruitment vs gear selectivity
  • Factors to consider when examining gear
    selectivity
  • gear type

trawl
gill net
67
retention of sea bream in gill nets
selection curves
Fig 9.8
68
Normal Curve (p. 188)
69
Historical trends in landing value by gear type
  • Ranking of the 10 gear types with the highest
    landed value for New England from 1950-1997

from Pol Carr 2000 NE Natur.7329
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