Gillnet Selectivity on Sockeye ( Oncorhynchus nerka ) and Pink Salmon ( O . gorbuscha ) of the Skeena River System, British Columbia

Exploitation of Skeena River sockeye salmon has been conducted almost solely by drift gillnets since 1875. This study was designed to determine the selective properties of nylon gillnets presently in use; to compare these with properties of linen nets used prior to 1955; and, using statistics of cat...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada
Main Authors: Todd, Ian St. P., Larkin, P. A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1971
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f71-123
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/f71-123
Description
Summary:Exploitation of Skeena River sockeye salmon has been conducted almost solely by drift gillnets since 1875. This study was designed to determine the selective properties of nylon gillnets presently in use; to compare these with properties of linen nets used prior to 1955; and, using statistics of catch and escapement, to estimate the selective action of the fishery as a whole on sockeye and pink salmon in 1968.Unique selectivity curves for nylon nets of [Formula: see text] mesh size could not be determined from sockeye catches. Mean size of age class 1.2 sockeye increased with mesh size but mean size of the predominant age class 1.3 sockeye demonstrated no trend. Age class 1.3 sockeye were among the largest on record and were too large to gill properly in all mesh sizes used.Comparison of [Formula: see text] mesh nylon gillnet with linen nets of [Formula: see text] mesh used in the historic fishery was also influenced by the large size of age class 1.3 sockeye. Nylon nets were 2.5 and 2.7 times as efficient as linen for sockeye, and 8.0 and 9.0 times for pink salmon. Nylon gillnets caught larger sockeye and pink salmon than did linen. Variances of mean size were also greater for catches in nylon.The statistics of catch and escapement for 1968 indicated that selection increased over the length range of age 1.2 sockeye but decreased over the length range of age class 1.3 sockeye. For pink salmon, which were extremely small in 1968, selection was increasingly large for larger size males and females. The length–girth relations of the species and sexes accounted for most of the difference between the selectivity curves. Retention by gillnets declined once the girth/mesh ratio exceeded 1.2 for sockeye. For pink salmon, no females were of a size to equal this ratio; the descending limb of the selectivity curve was due solely to males as the retention rates declined once girth/mesh ratio exceeded 1.0.These findings suggest that in most years the gillnet fishery on the Skeena River would tend to select relatively larger ...