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At present, Greenland halibut in the ICES subares I and II is caught by three types of fishing gears: trawls, longlines and gillnets. This study helps to understand and estimate differences in catches using these different types of fishing gears, as well as the influence of these fisheries on the ex...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alexander Pavlenko, Haraldur Einarsson
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.581.4790
http://www.unuftp.is/static/fellows/document/alex05prf.pdf
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Summary:At present, Greenland halibut in the ICES subares I and II is caught by three types of fishing gears: trawls, longlines and gillnets. This study helps to understand and estimate differences in catches using these different types of fishing gears, as well as the influence of these fisheries on the exploited stock. The material for this investigation is fishing data on the Greenland halibut which was collected by the Marine Research Institute of Iceland during the period 1970-2005. Selectivity parameters of trawl and longline are accepted from previous experimental work. Selectivity parameters for gillnet are estimated from data from the Marine Research Institute of Iceland. This study estimates the difference in mean length and sex composition for catches from trawls, longlines and gillnets. The mean length (62.5 ± 1.55) and female share (0.58 ± 0.04) of the annual catches from trawls are less than the mean lengths and female shares from gillnet and longline catches. The selectivity patterns, the length distributions of stock and the annual catches are used to estimate discard from various fishing gears. Discards from the trawl and gillnet fisheries are similar to or less than those from longline. It was determined that there was a