Size selectivity and escape mortality of gadoid fish in the Barents Sea trawl fishery

Responsible sheries management involve, among other things, operations to avoid catches of juvenile sh. Technical measures of shing gears to exclude small sh are thus generally regulated. Knowledge and control over the size selection characteristics of the shing gear are therefore required, and the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ingólfsson, Ólafur Arnar
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Bergen 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1956/1190
Description
Summary:Responsible sheries management involve, among other things, operations to avoid catches of juvenile sh. Technical measures of shing gears to exclude small sh are thus generally regulated. Knowledge and control over the size selection characteristics of the shing gear are therefore required, and the escaping sh should survive for the size selection to be a meaningful action. This thesis consists of four papers that deal with size selectivity and escape mortality of cod (Gadus morhua), haddock (Melanogrammus aegle nus) and saithe (Pollachius virens) in the Barents Sea bottom trawl sheries. Our studies show that the trawl ground gears contribute to the overall size selectivity of bottom trawls. Netting bags were rigged underneath a commercial trawl with a rockhopper gear, along the shing line, to collect sh that passed beneath the trawl. Approximately one third of the cod, a quarter of the haddock and seven percent of saithe available to the trawl escaped below the shing line. Cod escape rates were highly length dependent with an estimated length at 50% retention (L50) of 38.5 cm and selection range (L75 − L25 = SR) of 34.1 cm. Length dependence was less pronounced for haddock, and the escape rate of saithe was not length dependent. Some of the sh had been overrun by the gear as evidenced by scale abrasions and video observations. The size selection of a bottom trawl for cod with the mandatory con guration of a sorting grid with 55 mm bar spacings and a 135 mm diamond mesh codend was compared to that of conventional codends of 135 and 155 mm mesh sizes. Previous indirect comparisons have indicated sharper selection (narrower SR) for sorting grids than conventional codends. Based on these comparisons, the use of grids was made mandatory in the Barents Sea bottom trawl shery for cod. Our experimental studies demonstrated no evidence that the grid and mesh combination has sharper selection than conventional codends. The introduction of the grid corresponded to approx. 20 mm increase in mesh size, from 135 mm to 155 ...