Stress responses influencing fillet quality of trawled Atlantic cod and haddock

In this thesis, an experimental swim tunnel and cod-end was used as a model to investigate how stress during various stages of trawl capture affects fillet quality in terms of residual blood, time and hardness of post-mortem muscle stiffness and muscle colour of cod and haddock. In addition, the eff...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Fisheries Research
Main Author: Svalheim, Ragnhild Aven
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: UiT The Arctic University of Norway 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14238
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Summary:In this thesis, an experimental swim tunnel and cod-end was used as a model to investigate how stress during various stages of trawl capture affects fillet quality in terms of residual blood, time and hardness of post-mortem muscle stiffness and muscle colour of cod and haddock. In addition, the effect of stress on importance of timing of euthanasia was also addressed. The first stage of trawl capture that was chosen to study was the herding of fish in front of the trawl mouth. Two experiments were conducted to address this issue. The first involved exhaustive swimming of cod and the second critical swimming speed of haddock. These studies showed that exhaustive swimming causes a moderate stress response that takes longer than 6 hours to recover from and that exercise have a short-lasting effect on muscle texture, but little or no effect on muscle colouration. It was concluded that other stages of trawl capture have a higher impact on fillet quality. The third work of this thesis aimed to investigate how extreme crowding for 1 or 3 hours in the cod-end, following exhaustive swimming, would affect the physiology and muscle quality of cod. Findings from this study showed that crowding caused a severe stress response and that fish probably suffered from hypoxia due to inability to move their opercula. In addition, fillet quality was significantly reduced due to increased amount of residual blood in the muscles. The detrimental effects of crowding was not fully reversed by recuperation time for 6 hours. In the last study, the last stage of trawl capture process, i.e. the effect of air exposure on deck, was studied. Fish was stressed by mild crowding and then exposed to air for 15 or 30 minutes, or directly euthanised by terminal blow to the head and then left in air for 0, 15 or 30 minutes before exsanguination. We found that stress/crowding triggered a stronger response to the air exposure by faster increase in residual blood in the muscles, resulting in lower fillet quality. However, direct euthanasia stopped blood flow to the muscle and quality was significantly improved. Together these four studies show that there is a strong connection between the type of stress inflicted on the fish during capture and the quality of the fish product (fillets). Measures that may secure top quality fish from trawlers, include reducing crowding time in the cod-end and implementing direct euthanasia or live recuperation for more than 6 hours.