Catch comparison of flatfish pulse trawls and a tickler chain beam trawl

Pulse trawling is used to a growing extent in the Dutch flatfish beam trawl fleet, and deemed as a promising alternative to tickler chain beam trawling. A comparative fishing experiment was carried out with one vessel using conventional beam trawls, and the other two using flatfish pulse trawls supp...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Fisheries Research
Main Authors: van Marlen, B., Wiegerinck, J.A.M., van Os-Koomen, E., van Barneveld, E.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/catch-comparison-of-flatfish-pulse-trawls-and-a-tickler-chain-bea
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2013.11.007
Description
Summary:Pulse trawling is used to a growing extent in the Dutch flatfish beam trawl fleet, and deemed as a promising alternative to tickler chain beam trawling. A comparative fishing experiment was carried out with one vessel using conventional beam trawls, and the other two using flatfish pulse trawls supplied by two different companies. Pulse trawl landings were lower both expressed in kg h-1 (67% based on auction data) or baskets per hectare (81%). The pulse trawls had fewer fish discards (57%, p <0.0001), including 62% undersized plaice (Pleuronectes platessa L.) (p <0.0001), and 80% discarded weight of benthic invertebrates (p = 0.0198) per hectare. The pulse fishing technique resulted in a lower fuel consumption (37–49%), and consequently in spite of lower landings net revenues were higher. A downside of using pulse trawls is the possible spinal damage of marketable cod (Gadus morhua L.), but because total cod landings by beam trawls are low (4–5%), the implication will likely be limited.