Abstract

A new bycatch reduction device, termed “Excluder”, is presented as an alternative to a traditional rigid sorting grid, mandatory in the small-meshed Norway Pout (Trisopterus esmarkii) trawl fishery in the North Sea. The fishery is a high-volume fishery with large vessels, large demersal trawls and catches up to 100 tons per haul of this small forage fish. The Excluder is a 30 m long netting-based sorting system, developed to reduce bycatch (70 mm square meshes) and improving on board gear-handling and safety. The Excluder was tested against a 5.8 m2 standard sorting grid (35 mm bar spacing) in a twin-trawl experiment from the commercial 70 m trawler “S364 Rockall”. Catch data were analysed by species and length using the catch comparison method. For all bycatch species analysed, the Excluder had significantly lower catches relative to the grid: herring (21%), whiting (6%), mackerel (5%), American plaice (70%), witch flounder (15%), and lesser silver smelt (71%). For Norway Pout there was a significant increase in the overall catch efficiency of 32%. These results are explained by a 10 cm smaller L50 (the length of fish with 50% probability of being rejected by the sorting system) of the Excluder and a 15 times larger sorting area, which reduces the risk of clogging and loss of function. With these documented effects of improved sorting and target species catch efficiency, implementation of the Excluder would improve sustainability and address two main barriers of the current Norway pout fishery that limit quota capitalization; a tendency for Norway pout to mix with herring and whiting and lowered catch rates from grid-clogging. Additionally, gear-handling and safety on board would be improved.

Highlights

  • For all bycatch species analyzed it was estimated that the Excluder significantly reduced unwanted catches, either for specific fish lengths or averaged across all length-classes, when compared to the grid

  • From related sorting grid and square mesh selectivity studies (e.g. [23, 24]) and the fallthrough experiment of this study, it was hypothesized that the length-based rejection rate of the 70mm square meshes of the Excluder would be substantially higher than for the 35mm bar distance of the grid

  • This hypothesis was corroborated in the experimental fishery, where the Excluder had substantially lower catches of all six bycatch species compared to the grid

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Summary

Objectives

The main objective of the study was to develop and test an easy handled, high-safety, nettingbased sorting system, capable of minimizing unintended bycatch while efficiently retaining the target species in the Norway pout fishery

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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