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Commercial Fishing Boats

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Commercial Fishing Boats By Piper Cassidy & Harris Philpot Fishing Techniques Trolling Gillnetting Seining(Purse, Drag, Beach) Longlining Otter Trawling Bottom ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Commercial Fishing Boats


1
Commercial Fishing Boats
  • By Piper Cassidy Harris Philpot

2
Fishing Techniques
  • Trolling
  • Gillnetting
  • Seining(Purse, Drag, Beach)
  • Longlining
  • Otter Trawling
  • Bottom Trawling
  • Mid-water Trawling
  • Weirs and Traps

3
Trolling
  • Trolling is a salmon fishing method in which fish
    are caught on hooks towed on lines behind the
    vessel.
  • Troll-caught salmon bring in top prices because
    they are cleaned and iced or frozen immediately
    after being caught and are not scarred by net
    marks.
  •  

4
Gillnetting
  • Gillnetting is one of the oldest forms of
    fishing, practiced around the world for thousands
    of years.
  • A gillnet is a long, horizontal mesh sheet with
    floats along the upper edge.
  • It is set perpendicular to the path of the fish
    and designed so that incoming fish can get their
    heads but not their bodies through the mesh
  • The types of fish caught are salmon,carp,
    catfishes and spiney-rayed fishes ,herring,
    eulachon, smelt

5
Seining
  • Seining is a method of fishing in which a net is
    used to encircle fish.
  • Two types of seines are used in BC the purse
    seine and the drag, or beach, seine.

6
Purse Seining
  • Purse seining is the predominant seining method
    used today.
  • It works on the same principle of encircling a
    school of fish with a long length of net held
    afloat by a corkline or buoys on the top. The
    difference is that the lead line on the bottom is
    pulled up under the water, closing the hole in
    the bottom of the circle so that the fish are
    enclosed in a small purse-like pocket of net.
    Purse seining requires the use of two boats
  • no electronic or marine gear is really needed to
    find the fish. By knowing the spots and watching
    for signs, such as seagulls overhead or jumping
    salmon, fishermen can detect where schools of
    salmon are.

7
Drag Seining
  • Drag seines were used in river mouths where
    salmon gathered before heading upstream to spawn.
  • First Nations fishermen used two canoes, but
    later, rowboats called skiffs were used. The two
    boats would each carry a piece of the net and
    make a circle with it. Paddling or rowing the
    boats to the same place closed the net circle
    trapping the fish. The nets were then hauled up
    into the boats, catch and all.

8
Beach Seining
  • Beach seining was possible only at locations
    where salmon gathered in large numbers close to
    shore.
  • At such locations nets could be placed or held on
    shore by one fisherman while another, in a boat,
    let out the line and set the net parallel to
    shore, keeping it in place with stone anchors.
    The boat would then return to shore, having
    encircled the school of fish, and hand the line
    off to another fisherman standing on shore. The
    two fishermen on shore would then slowly haul in
    the net, trapping the salmon between the net and
    the beach.

9
Longlining
  • Longlining is a hook-and-line fishery in which
    long lengths of baited hooks are laid on the
    ocean floor to catch halibut, sablefish,
    rockfish, dogfish,swordfish and other species of
    groundfish.

10
Otter Trawling
  • Trawling, or dragging, is a commercial fishing
    method in which a trawl vessel (trawler or
    dragger) drags a cone-shaped net with a
    rectangular opening through the water to trap
    fish.
  • Trawling is used to take a wide variety of
    species in a number of separate fisheries
    including shrimp, euphausiids, scallops and
    groundfish
  • The wings of the net are spread by large wood or
    steel "otter boards," or "doors," which are
    connected to the winch drum on the vessel and
    keep the doors straining outwards from the wings.

11
Bottom Trawler
  • The bottom trawl has rollers along its bottom
    edge, while floats on the top edge keep the net
    open.
  • The groundfish trawl fleet consists of 142
    licence holders (of which about 80 were active in
    1999) during the 1990s they landed an average of
    140,000 tonnes annually with an estimated
    wholesale value of 133 million.
  • Most groundfish trawlers must carry
    government-approved observers to gather data
    needed to manage the fishery and comply with
    regulations.

12
Mid-water trawling
  • Mid-water trawls do not require rollers because
    they do not come into contact with the bottom,
    but they do use weights, floats and doors to keep
    the net open.
  • Mid-water trawling accounts for more than 76 of
    the groundfish catch by volume, mostly hake and
    turbot.

13
Weirs Traps
  • Weirs and traps are devices that were employed
    traditionally by First Nations fishers to catch
    salmon and trout migrating through tidal waters
    or travelling upstream to spawn.
  • A weir is a fence-like structure constructed
    from rocks and/or posts and latticework set
    across a stream to block the passage of fish.
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