GILLNET CALIBRATION FOR SPINY DOGFISH ABUNDANCE ASSESSMENT

Spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias) is one of the most abundant species in the Northwest Atlantic however; the stocks collapsed in the late 1990s and were declared overfished April 3, 1998 by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. Spiny dogfish have recently been declared recovered well ahea...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wright, Garry Lyn, Jr.
Other Authors: Rulifson, Roger A. (Roger Allen), 1951-, Biology
Format: Master Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: East Carolina University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10342/4326
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record_format openpolar
spelling fteastcaroluni:oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/4326 2023-05-15T17:45:47+02:00 GILLNET CALIBRATION FOR SPINY DOGFISH ABUNDANCE ASSESSMENT Wright, Garry Lyn, Jr. Rulifson, Roger A. (Roger Allen), 1951- Biology 2013 99 p. dissertations, academic application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10342/4326 unknown East Carolina University http://hdl.handle.net/10342/4326 Biology Gillnet Spiny dogfish--Atlantic Coast (U.S.) Spiny dogfish fisheries--Atlantic Coast (U.S.) Overfishing--Atlantic Coast (U.S.) Sampling (Statistics) Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission Northeast Fisheries Science Center (U.S.) Master's Thesis 2013 fteastcaroluni 2022-07-11T11:40:44Z Spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias) is one of the most abundant species in the Northwest Atlantic however; the stocks collapsed in the late 1990s and were declared overfished April 3, 1998 by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. Spiny dogfish have recently been declared recovered well ahead of the 15 to 20 year recovery time estimated by Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, resulting in the methods of the Northeast Fishery Science Center's trawl survey to be questioned. Gillnets are widely used for fishing operations and assessments. This project was undertaken to determine the feasibility and estimate parameters for using gillnets to estimate abundances. The goals of this study were to determine the percentage of spiny dogfish vertically distributed above the fishing height of the NEFSC calibrated trawl survey and determine the catchability of spiny dogfish in a gillnet. The catchability of spiny dogfish in a gillnet was determined by multi-pass depletion sampling inside a corral net. The maximum efficiency was 8.6% with a 95% confidence interval of 5.8% to 11.3% during a 10 minute soak time. The minimum catch efficiency was 1.6% with a 95% confidence interval of 0.9% to 2.2%. Recalculated population estimates from a previous study using gillnets produced estimates between 3.87 x 10� and 9.09 x 10� metric tons of mature females, depending on the method of estimating catch efficiency used for coastal North Carolina waters. Catch efficiency was not affected by dogfish being tagged; tagged dogfish are captured at the same rate as untagged. A vertically elongated gillnet was used to estimate that the NEFSC is missing a minimum of 21.8 % (SD = 25.1%, Variance = 6.3) of the dogfish vertically suspended in the water column depending on water depth. The findings of this study indicate that a large number of spiny dogfish may not be adequately sampled by the NEFSC calibrated trawl survey and supplemental sampling methods should be considered. M.S. Master Thesis Northwest Atlantic spiny dogfish Squalus acanthias East Carolina University: The ScholarShip at ECU Corral ENVELOPE(-62.950,-62.950,-64.900,-64.900)
institution Open Polar
collection East Carolina University: The ScholarShip at ECU
op_collection_id fteastcaroluni
language unknown
topic Biology
Gillnet
Spiny dogfish--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Spiny dogfish fisheries--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Overfishing--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Sampling (Statistics)
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission
Northeast Fisheries Science Center (U.S.)
spellingShingle Biology
Gillnet
Spiny dogfish--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Spiny dogfish fisheries--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Overfishing--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Sampling (Statistics)
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission
Northeast Fisheries Science Center (U.S.)
Wright, Garry Lyn, Jr.
GILLNET CALIBRATION FOR SPINY DOGFISH ABUNDANCE ASSESSMENT
topic_facet Biology
Gillnet
Spiny dogfish--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Spiny dogfish fisheries--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Overfishing--Atlantic Coast (U.S.)
Sampling (Statistics)
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission
Northeast Fisheries Science Center (U.S.)
description Spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias) is one of the most abundant species in the Northwest Atlantic however; the stocks collapsed in the late 1990s and were declared overfished April 3, 1998 by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. Spiny dogfish have recently been declared recovered well ahead of the 15 to 20 year recovery time estimated by Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, resulting in the methods of the Northeast Fishery Science Center's trawl survey to be questioned. Gillnets are widely used for fishing operations and assessments. This project was undertaken to determine the feasibility and estimate parameters for using gillnets to estimate abundances. The goals of this study were to determine the percentage of spiny dogfish vertically distributed above the fishing height of the NEFSC calibrated trawl survey and determine the catchability of spiny dogfish in a gillnet. The catchability of spiny dogfish in a gillnet was determined by multi-pass depletion sampling inside a corral net. The maximum efficiency was 8.6% with a 95% confidence interval of 5.8% to 11.3% during a 10 minute soak time. The minimum catch efficiency was 1.6% with a 95% confidence interval of 0.9% to 2.2%. Recalculated population estimates from a previous study using gillnets produced estimates between 3.87 x 10� and 9.09 x 10� metric tons of mature females, depending on the method of estimating catch efficiency used for coastal North Carolina waters. Catch efficiency was not affected by dogfish being tagged; tagged dogfish are captured at the same rate as untagged. A vertically elongated gillnet was used to estimate that the NEFSC is missing a minimum of 21.8 % (SD = 25.1%, Variance = 6.3) of the dogfish vertically suspended in the water column depending on water depth. The findings of this study indicate that a large number of spiny dogfish may not be adequately sampled by the NEFSC calibrated trawl survey and supplemental sampling methods should be considered. M.S.
author2 Rulifson, Roger A. (Roger Allen), 1951-
Biology
format Master Thesis
author Wright, Garry Lyn, Jr.
author_facet Wright, Garry Lyn, Jr.
author_sort Wright, Garry Lyn, Jr.
title GILLNET CALIBRATION FOR SPINY DOGFISH ABUNDANCE ASSESSMENT
title_short GILLNET CALIBRATION FOR SPINY DOGFISH ABUNDANCE ASSESSMENT
title_full GILLNET CALIBRATION FOR SPINY DOGFISH ABUNDANCE ASSESSMENT
title_fullStr GILLNET CALIBRATION FOR SPINY DOGFISH ABUNDANCE ASSESSMENT
title_full_unstemmed GILLNET CALIBRATION FOR SPINY DOGFISH ABUNDANCE ASSESSMENT
title_sort gillnet calibration for spiny dogfish abundance assessment
publisher East Carolina University
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10342/4326
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.950,-62.950,-64.900,-64.900)
geographic Corral
geographic_facet Corral
genre Northwest Atlantic
spiny dogfish
Squalus acanthias
genre_facet Northwest Atlantic
spiny dogfish
Squalus acanthias
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10342/4326
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