The Northern Rockfish, Sebastes Polyspinis, in Alaska: Commercial Fishery, Distribution, and Biology

"The northern rockfish, Sebastes polyspinis, is the second most abundant rockfish in Alaska, and it supports a valuable trawl fishery. Little information is available, however, on either the biology of this species or its commercial fishery. To provide a synopsis of information on northern rock...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Clausen, David M., Heifitz, Jonathan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10535/6981
id ftdlc:oai:http://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu:10535/6981
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdlc:oai:http://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu:10535/6981 2023-05-15T17:04:39+02:00 The Northern Rockfish, Sebastes Polyspinis, in Alaska: Commercial Fishery, Distribution, and Biology Clausen, David M. Heifitz, Jonathan North America United States 2002 http://hdl.handle.net/10535/6981 English eng http://hdl.handle.net/10535/6981 Marine Fisheries Review 64 1-28 4 biology fisheries Journal Article published Case Study 2002 ftdlc 2021-03-11T16:18:09Z "The northern rockfish, Sebastes polyspinis, is the second most abundant rockfish in Alaska, and it supports a valuable trawl fishery. Little information is available, however, on either the biology of this species or its commercial fishery. To provide a synopsis of information on northern rockfish in Alaska, this study examined data for this species from commercial fishery observations in 1990???98 and from fishery-independent trawl surveys in 1980???99. Nearly all the commercial catch came from bottom trawling, mostly by large factory-trawlers, although smaller shore-based trawlers in recent years took an increasing portion of the catch in the Gulf of Alaska. Most of the northern rockfish catch in the Gulf of Alaska was taken by a directed fishery, whereas that of the Aleutian Islands predominantly came as discarded bycatch in the Atka mackerel fishery. In both regions, most of the catch was taken from a number of relatively small and discrete fishing grounds at depths of 75???150 m in the Gulf of Alaska and 75???175 m in the Aleutian Islands. These grounds, especially in the Gulf of Alaska, are on shallow rises or banks located on the outer continental shelf, and often are surrounded by deeper water. Five fishing grounds were identified in the Gulf of Alaska, and eleven in the Aleutian Islands. One fishing ground in the Gulf of Alaska, the 'Snakehead' south of Kodiak Island, accounted for 46% of the total northern rockfish catch in this region. Analysis of the survey data generally revealed similar patterns of geographic distribution as those seen in the fishery, although some of the commercial fishing grounds did not stand out as areas of special abundance in the surveys. The surveys also found two areas of abundance that were not evident in the fishery data. Relatively few juvenile northern rockfish were caught in any of the surveys, but those taken in the Gulf of Alaska tended to occur more inshore and at shallower depths than adults. Individual size of northern rockfish was substantially larger in the Gulf of Alaska than in the Aleutian Islands according to both fishery and survey data. Analysis of age data from each region supports this, as Gulf of Alaska fish were found to grow significantly faster and reach a larger maximum length than those in the Aleutian Islands. Sex ratio in the Gulf of Alaska was nearly 50:50, but females predominated in the Aleutian Islands by a ratio of 57:43. In both regions, size of females was significantly larger than males." Article in Journal/Newspaper Kodiak Alaska Aleutian Islands Indiana University: Digital Library of the Commons (DLC) Gulf of Alaska Atka ENVELOPE(151.789,151.789,60.835,60.835) Fishing Ground ENVELOPE(-55.848,-55.848,49.550,49.550)
institution Open Polar
collection Indiana University: Digital Library of the Commons (DLC)
op_collection_id ftdlc
language English
topic biology
fisheries
spellingShingle biology
fisheries
Clausen, David M.
Heifitz, Jonathan
The Northern Rockfish, Sebastes Polyspinis, in Alaska: Commercial Fishery, Distribution, and Biology
topic_facet biology
fisheries
description "The northern rockfish, Sebastes polyspinis, is the second most abundant rockfish in Alaska, and it supports a valuable trawl fishery. Little information is available, however, on either the biology of this species or its commercial fishery. To provide a synopsis of information on northern rockfish in Alaska, this study examined data for this species from commercial fishery observations in 1990???98 and from fishery-independent trawl surveys in 1980???99. Nearly all the commercial catch came from bottom trawling, mostly by large factory-trawlers, although smaller shore-based trawlers in recent years took an increasing portion of the catch in the Gulf of Alaska. Most of the northern rockfish catch in the Gulf of Alaska was taken by a directed fishery, whereas that of the Aleutian Islands predominantly came as discarded bycatch in the Atka mackerel fishery. In both regions, most of the catch was taken from a number of relatively small and discrete fishing grounds at depths of 75???150 m in the Gulf of Alaska and 75???175 m in the Aleutian Islands. These grounds, especially in the Gulf of Alaska, are on shallow rises or banks located on the outer continental shelf, and often are surrounded by deeper water. Five fishing grounds were identified in the Gulf of Alaska, and eleven in the Aleutian Islands. One fishing ground in the Gulf of Alaska, the 'Snakehead' south of Kodiak Island, accounted for 46% of the total northern rockfish catch in this region. Analysis of the survey data generally revealed similar patterns of geographic distribution as those seen in the fishery, although some of the commercial fishing grounds did not stand out as areas of special abundance in the surveys. The surveys also found two areas of abundance that were not evident in the fishery data. Relatively few juvenile northern rockfish were caught in any of the surveys, but those taken in the Gulf of Alaska tended to occur more inshore and at shallower depths than adults. Individual size of northern rockfish was substantially larger in the Gulf of Alaska than in the Aleutian Islands according to both fishery and survey data. Analysis of age data from each region supports this, as Gulf of Alaska fish were found to grow significantly faster and reach a larger maximum length than those in the Aleutian Islands. Sex ratio in the Gulf of Alaska was nearly 50:50, but females predominated in the Aleutian Islands by a ratio of 57:43. In both regions, size of females was significantly larger than males."
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Clausen, David M.
Heifitz, Jonathan
author_facet Clausen, David M.
Heifitz, Jonathan
author_sort Clausen, David M.
title The Northern Rockfish, Sebastes Polyspinis, in Alaska: Commercial Fishery, Distribution, and Biology
title_short The Northern Rockfish, Sebastes Polyspinis, in Alaska: Commercial Fishery, Distribution, and Biology
title_full The Northern Rockfish, Sebastes Polyspinis, in Alaska: Commercial Fishery, Distribution, and Biology
title_fullStr The Northern Rockfish, Sebastes Polyspinis, in Alaska: Commercial Fishery, Distribution, and Biology
title_full_unstemmed The Northern Rockfish, Sebastes Polyspinis, in Alaska: Commercial Fishery, Distribution, and Biology
title_sort northern rockfish, sebastes polyspinis, in alaska: commercial fishery, distribution, and biology
publishDate 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/10535/6981
op_coverage North America
United States
long_lat ENVELOPE(151.789,151.789,60.835,60.835)
ENVELOPE(-55.848,-55.848,49.550,49.550)
geographic Gulf of Alaska
Atka
Fishing Ground
geographic_facet Gulf of Alaska
Atka
Fishing Ground
genre Kodiak
Alaska
Aleutian Islands
genre_facet Kodiak
Alaska
Aleutian Islands
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10535/6981
Marine Fisheries Review
64
1-28
4
_version_ 1766058962555240448