Abstract

Coral reef fisheries are vital to the livelihoods of millions of people worldwide but are challenging to manage due to the high diversity of fish species that are harvested and the multiple types of fishing gear that are used. Fish traps are a commonly used gear in reef fisheries in the Caribbean and other regions, but they have poor selectivity and frequently capture juvenile fish, impacting the sustainability of the fishery. One option for managing trap fisheries is the addition of escape gaps, which allow small fish to escape. We compared catches of traps with and without two 2.5 cm (1 inch) escape gaps on the Caribbean island of Montserrat. No significant differences were found in the mean fish length, total fish biomass, number of fish, fish species richness, and Shannon diversity index between hauls of the two trap designs, though traps with escape gaps did catch larger proportions of wider-bodied fish and smaller proportions of narrow-bodied fish. Furthermore, traps with gaps caught a smaller proportion of small-sized fish and fewer immature fish (though differences were not statistically significant). Linear mixed effect models predict that soak time (the length of time between trap hauls) increases the mean catch length, total catch biomass and total number of species in the catch. The relatively modest evidence for the effect of the gaps on catch may be explained by the long soak times used, which could have allowed most smaller-sized fish to escape or be consumed by larger individuals before hauling in both traps with and without escape gaps. Despite the small differences detected in this study, escape gaps may still offer one of the best options for improving sustainability of catches from fish traps, but larger escape gaps should be tested with varying soak times to determine optimum escape gap size.

Highlights

  • Reef fisheries provide livelihoods for an estimated 6 million reef fishers worldwide [1], and reef fish provide an important source of income and nutrition to some of the world’s poorest people [2, 3]

  • Traps were hauled a total of 336 times; 157 hauls of control traps and 179 hauls of experimental traps

  • A total of 135 of these hauls were paired traps, with the remaining 22 control traps and 44 experimental traps hauled singly due to the paired trap being lost or unable to be located on that day

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Summary

Introduction

Reef fisheries provide livelihoods for an estimated 6 million reef fishers worldwide [1], and reef fish provide an important source of income and nutrition to some of the world’s poorest people [2, 3]. Traps are popular with reef fishers as they are relatively simple and inexpensive to make [13], can be used on rugged substrates where other gears might be damaged [14], and they catch fish without the fisher having to attend them and, as such, can be left at sea in inclement weather [15]. They present a challenge for reef managers as they can negatively impact fish stocks and ecosystems in a number of ways. These traps will continue to catch fish for as long as their physical structure is intact, called “ghost fishing”, contributing to fish mortality and marine debris

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