Giving eyes to pelagic trawls: Acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ

Trawling, towing a cone-shaped net behind a moving boat, is a widespread fishing method both in commercial fisheries and to collect fish for scientific investigations. It combines filtering effect with herding behaviour of fish in response to the vessel and components of the trawl to concentrate the...

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Published in:ICES Journal of Marine Science
Main Author: Rosen, Shale
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Bergen 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1956/7887
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spelling ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/7887 2023-05-15T15:27:51+02:00 Giving eyes to pelagic trawls: Acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ Rosen, Shale 2013-11-26 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1956/7887 eng eng The University of Bergen Paper I: Rosen, S., Engås, A., Fernö, A., and Jörgensen, T. 2012. The reactions of shoaling adult cod to a pelagic trawl. ICES Journal of Marine Science 69: 303-312. Full-text not available in BORA. The published version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsr199 Paper II: Rosen, S., Jörgensen, T., Hammersland-White, D., and Holst, J.C. 2013. DeepVision: a stereo camera system provides highly accurate counts and lengths of fish passing inside a trawl. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 70: 1456-1467. Full-text not available in BORA. The published version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2013-0124 Paper III: Rosen, S. and Holst, J.C. (in press). DeepVision in-trawl imaging: Sampling the water column in four dimensions. Fisheries Research 148, pp. 64-73. Full-text not available in BORA. The published version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2013.08.002 urn:isbn:978-82-308-2430-6 http://hdl.handle.net/1956/7887 Copyright the author. All rights reserved Doctoral thesis 2013 ftunivbergen https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsr19910.1139/cjfas-2013-012410.1016/j.fishres.2013.08.002 2023-03-14T17:41:30Z Trawling, towing a cone-shaped net behind a moving boat, is a widespread fishing method both in commercial fisheries and to collect fish for scientific investigations. It combines filtering effect with herding behaviour of fish in response to the vessel and components of the trawl to concentrate them in its path. For pelagic trawls, designed to be fished in the water column with little or no contact on the seabed, mesh openings in the forward and belly sections can be metres across making them relatively inefficient filters and reliant on herding to guide fish into the codend where meshes are small enough to prevent fish from escaping. Nevertheless, few studies have focused on the behaviour of fish, particularly large gadoids, during pelagic trawling and as a result trawl designs and fishing strategies are likely not optimized either for commercial harvest or research sampling. The first investigation described in this thesis revealed that shoaling Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) captured in a commercial fishing setting using a pelagic trawl dove following vessel passage and swam towards the approaching trawl, with a significant proportion of fish escaping beneath the trawl. Once they were inside the trawl, the cod turned and swam slowly in the direction of trawling but were carried deeper into the trawl by its greater speed through water. They remained in the lower portion of the trawl, suggesting the top panel played little role in retaining fish and could be modified to reduce drag without reducing the catch. Despite the use of three acoustic sensors and multiple mechanical catch sensors mounted to the trawl, poor information was available during trawling on the species, sizes, and quantity of fish entering and already inside the trawl. In a commercial fishery, this would likely result in bycatch and discards. In response to this information gap, an in-trawl camera system, DeepVision, was developed to identify and measure all fish as they passed into the codend. Stereo photogrammetric techniques were developed to ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis atlantic cod Gadus morhua University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB) ICES Journal of Marine Science 69 2 303 312
institution Open Polar
collection University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB)
op_collection_id ftunivbergen
language English
description Trawling, towing a cone-shaped net behind a moving boat, is a widespread fishing method both in commercial fisheries and to collect fish for scientific investigations. It combines filtering effect with herding behaviour of fish in response to the vessel and components of the trawl to concentrate them in its path. For pelagic trawls, designed to be fished in the water column with little or no contact on the seabed, mesh openings in the forward and belly sections can be metres across making them relatively inefficient filters and reliant on herding to guide fish into the codend where meshes are small enough to prevent fish from escaping. Nevertheless, few studies have focused on the behaviour of fish, particularly large gadoids, during pelagic trawling and as a result trawl designs and fishing strategies are likely not optimized either for commercial harvest or research sampling. The first investigation described in this thesis revealed that shoaling Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) captured in a commercial fishing setting using a pelagic trawl dove following vessel passage and swam towards the approaching trawl, with a significant proportion of fish escaping beneath the trawl. Once they were inside the trawl, the cod turned and swam slowly in the direction of trawling but were carried deeper into the trawl by its greater speed through water. They remained in the lower portion of the trawl, suggesting the top panel played little role in retaining fish and could be modified to reduce drag without reducing the catch. Despite the use of three acoustic sensors and multiple mechanical catch sensors mounted to the trawl, poor information was available during trawling on the species, sizes, and quantity of fish entering and already inside the trawl. In a commercial fishery, this would likely result in bycatch and discards. In response to this information gap, an in-trawl camera system, DeepVision, was developed to identify and measure all fish as they passed into the codend. Stereo photogrammetric techniques were developed to ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Rosen, Shale
spellingShingle Rosen, Shale
Giving eyes to pelagic trawls: Acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ
author_facet Rosen, Shale
author_sort Rosen, Shale
title Giving eyes to pelagic trawls: Acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ
title_short Giving eyes to pelagic trawls: Acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ
title_full Giving eyes to pelagic trawls: Acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ
title_fullStr Giving eyes to pelagic trawls: Acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ
title_full_unstemmed Giving eyes to pelagic trawls: Acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ
title_sort giving eyes to pelagic trawls: acoustic and optical techniques measure behaviour, species, and sizes of fish in situ
publisher The University of Bergen
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1956/7887
genre atlantic cod
Gadus morhua
genre_facet atlantic cod
Gadus morhua
op_relation Paper I: Rosen, S., Engås, A., Fernö, A., and Jörgensen, T. 2012. The reactions of shoaling adult cod to a pelagic trawl. ICES Journal of Marine Science 69: 303-312. Full-text not available in BORA. The published version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsr199
Paper II: Rosen, S., Jörgensen, T., Hammersland-White, D., and Holst, J.C. 2013. DeepVision: a stereo camera system provides highly accurate counts and lengths of fish passing inside a trawl. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 70: 1456-1467. Full-text not available in BORA. The published version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2013-0124
Paper III: Rosen, S. and Holst, J.C. (in press). DeepVision in-trawl imaging: Sampling the water column in four dimensions. Fisheries Research 148, pp. 64-73. Full-text not available in BORA. The published version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2013.08.002
urn:isbn:978-82-308-2430-6
http://hdl.handle.net/1956/7887
op_rights Copyright the author. All rights reserved
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsr19910.1139/cjfas-2013-012410.1016/j.fishres.2013.08.002
container_title ICES Journal of Marine Science
container_volume 69
container_issue 2
container_start_page 303
op_container_end_page 312
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