Effective herding of flatfish by cables with minimal seafloor contact

Otter trawls are very effective at capturing flatfish, butthey can affect the seaf loor ecosystems where they are used. Alaska f latf ish trawlers have very long cables (called sweeps) between doors and net to herd fish into the path of the trawl. These sweeps, which ride on and can disturb the seaf...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rose, Craig S., Gauvin, John R., Hammond, Carwyn F.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/25401
Description
Summary:Otter trawls are very effective at capturing flatfish, butthey can affect the seaf loor ecosystems where they are used. Alaska f latf ish trawlers have very long cables (called sweeps) between doors and net to herd fish into the path of the trawl. These sweeps, which ride on and can disturb the seaf loor, account for most of the area affectedby these trawls and hence a large proportion of the potential for damage to seaf loor organisms. We examinedmodifications to otter trawls, such that disk clusters were installed at 9-m intervals to raise trawl sweeps small distances above the seafloor, greatly reducing the area of direct seafloor contact. A critical consideration was whether flatfish would still be herded effectively by these sweeps. We compared conventional and modified sweeps using a twin trawl system and analyzed the volume and compositionof the resulting catches. We tested sweeps raised 5, 7.5, and 10 cm and observed no significant losses of flatfish catch until sweeps were raised 10 cm, and those losses wererelatively small (5–10%). No size composition changes were detected in the flatfish catches. Alaska pollock (Theragrachalcogramma) were captured at higher rates with two versions of the modified sweeps. Sonar observations of the sweeps in operation and the seaf loor after passage confirmed that the area of direct seafloor contact was greatly reduced by the modified sweep