Title: Fishing gear
1Fishing 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
2Type of gear and method used
- Dependent on species fishing
3Type of gear and method used
- Dependent on species fishing
- Gear types
- passive
- inexpensive and less damage to habitat
4Type of gear and method used
- Dependent on species fishing
- Gear types
- passive
- inexpensive and less damage to habitat
- active
- more expensive, but more efficient
5Type of gear and method used
- Dependent on species fishing
- Gear types
- Accounting for fish behavior
- tend to be most efficient methods
6Type 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
7Traps
- Encourage entry and prevent escape
8Traps
- Encourage entry and prevent escape
- baited traps
- carnivorous species
- eels, snappers, breams
Eel trap
9Traps
- Encourage entry and prevent escape
- baited traps
- control through regulating
- size of mesh
- number and position of openings
Minnow trap
10Traps
- Encourage entry and prevent escape
- baited traps
- unbaited
- resembling a refuge
11Traps
- Encourage entry and prevent escape
- baited traps
- unbaited
- barrier or fence traps
12Traps
- 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)
13Barrier net
14Hook and line
- Hand-held
- J-hook
- recreational
- circle hook
- commercial
- shark, halibut, deep water snappers
15Hook 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
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18Stationary Nets
- Passive gear
- Regulations
- mesh size
- number of vessels deploying
19Stationary Nets
- Gill nets
- used in shallow water for mackerel,mullet, shad
- used in deeper water for demersal fish such as
sharks
20Stationary Nets
- Gill nets
- very selective fishing gear (see Box 5.4)
European sea bass
21Stationary Nets
- Gill nets
- very selective fishing gear
- but, responsible for bycatches of marine mammals,
reptiles and birds
22Stationary 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
23Stationary Nets
24Stationary Nets
- Tangle nets
- large mesh
- animals get snagged on mesh
- effective for spiny organisms
25Towed nets and dredges
26Towed nets and dredges
- Active gear
- most widely used
27Towed nets and dredges
- Active gear
- most widely used
- incredibly unselective
28Towed nets and dredges
- Otter trawls
- otter boards, floats
- demersal or pelagic species
- fishing speed
29Towed nets and dredges
- Beam trawl
- Horizontal beam
- Any speed
- Shrimp, flatfish
30Towed nets and dredges
- Dredges
- Similar to beam trawls
- Scallops, clams, gastropods
31Towed nets and dredges
- Dredges
- Destroy habitat
- Reduced bycatch
32Surrounding nets
- Take advantage of schooling behavior
- clupeids, tuna, etc.
33Surrounding nets
- Beach seine
- sardine, mackerel, flat fish
34Surrounding nets
- Purse seine
- efficient gear
- over 100 tons captured in single haul
- located with sonar or helicopter then...
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36Aggregation devices
- Take advantage of congregation behavior
- Floating rafts anchored offshore to attract
pelagic fish (depths gt1000m)
37Aggregation devices
- Advantages
- reduce search time
- reducing fuel costs
- increase fish catch
38Aggregation devices
- Disadvantage
- costs (3000/unit in 1990)
- lifespan less than 1 year
39Other techniques
- spears, poles
- diving
- poison
- explosives
40Destructive effects
- Development of gear aimed at reducing catch of
small and non-target individuals
41Destructive effects
- Exclusion devices (TEDs)
- Trawl Efficiency Devices
- Trash Eradication Devices
- Turtle Exclusion Devices
Fig 5.13
42Destructive effects
- Ecological Effects
- e.g. on food chains (krill fishing on stocks of
whales)
43Destructive effects
- Physical damage (easy to assess)
- demersal trawl nets and dredges
- prevent settlement of benthos
44Destructive effects
- Effect on escaped individuals?
45Destructive effects
- Effect on escaped individuals?
- assumptions fish escaping are
- not damaged
- minimally stressed
- make a complete recovery
46Destructive 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
47Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
- Highly variable depending on fishing method and
study conducted
48Gear 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
49Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
- Seines
- 85 mortality of those released due to forced
swimming, struggling injury
50Gear mortality estimates Chopin Arimoto.
1995. Fisheries Research. 21 315-327.
- Trolling
- 40-86 and 34-52 of chinook coho
51Gear 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
52Gear 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
53Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Stage chosen for a recruitment index depends on
consistent (precise) and verifiable measures
54Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- consistent and verifiable measures depend on
sampling gear used
55Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- In addition to recruitment ogive, must consider
selectivity ogive
100
recruitment
Recruited
resultant
selectivity
0
Age or size
56Recruitment vs gear selectivity
Fig 9.7
57Logistic Curve (p. 187)
58Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity
59Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity - fish girth
60Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity - mesh size
61Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity - gear avoidance capabilities
62Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity - recruitment size
63Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity - fish behaviour (schooling, diel)
64Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity - day or night deployment
65Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity - is gear sampling random portion
66Recruitment vs gear selectivity
- Factors to consider when examining gear
selectivity - gear type
trawl
gill net
67retention of sea bream in gill nets
selection curves
Fig 9.8
68Normal Curve (p. 188)
69Historical 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