The risk of individual fish being captured multiple times in a catch and release fishery

The proportion of angled Atlantic salmon Salmo salar L. being caught and released has increased. If individuals are repeatedly captured, this may have fish welfare consequences. Of 995 Atlantic salmon tagged during catch and release in eight Norwegian rivers, 10% were captured twice, while 3% were c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Fisheries Management and Ecology
Main Authors: Thorstad, Eva Bonsak, Diserud, Ola Håvard, Solem, Øyvind, Havn, Torgeir Børresen, Bjørum, Lars Rasmus Oftedal, Kristensen, Torstein, Urke, Henning Andre, Johansen, Martin Rognli, Lennox, Robert J., Fiske, Peder, Uglem, Ingebrigt
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Science 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2656396
https://doi.org/10.1111/fme.12407
Description
Summary:The proportion of angled Atlantic salmon Salmo salar L. being caught and released has increased. If individuals are repeatedly captured, this may have fish welfare consequences. Of 995 Atlantic salmon tagged during catch and release in eight Norwegian rivers, 10% were captured twice, while 3% were captured three times within the same fishing season. The probability that released salmon were captured again decreased with decreasing time left of the fishing season, decreased for larger‐sized fish and varied among rivers/years. Increased exploitation rates within the river, indicating an increased fishing pressure, strongly increased the probability that fish would be recaptured. However, the proportion of salmon caught a second time was much lower than the total exploitation rates in the same rivers (which was on average 46%). For fish tagged in the sea, the likelihood of being angled decreased with time since entering the river, which may explain why the recapture rates of caught and released fish were lower than the total exploitation rates. publishedVersion Paid Open Access