Abstract
Size selection in the northern shrimp (Pandalus borealis) trawl fisheries is a widely studied topic. While the focus has largely been on codend and grid selectivity, studies have shown the importance of other design changes and the application of artificial light to evoke behavioural responses. LED lights of three different colours — green (∼470–580 nm), white (∼425–750 nm) and red (∼580–670 nm) — were mounted in the belly section of a shrimp trawl to investigate their influence on the overall selectivity of the trawl. The study was conducted using a twin-trawl setup, one with light and the other without light. For catch-comparison analysis, a polynomial regression with random effects was applied. The number of valid hauls with green, white and red lights were eleven, eight, and nine, respectively. All lights tested significantly affected the length-dependent retention of shrimp. Green light had the greatest effect, red the least. Significant loss was observed for shrimp below 17.5 mm carapace length (CL) for green light, 19.5 mm CL for white and 20.8 mm CL for red light.
Highlights
Shrimp fisheries are important worldwide, and harvesting is mostly done using trawls (Gillett 2008)
Shrimp vessels operating in Skagerrak and the North Sea grade their shrimp catch onboard into three categories: undersized shrimp (
This study demonstrated that artificial light installed at the rear end of the trawl’s belly increased the escape of small shrimp compared to an identical trawl without light
Summary
Shrimp fisheries are important worldwide, and harvesting is mostly done using trawls (Gillett 2008). Important issues remain regarding excessive catches of undersized shrimp, and bycatches of juveniles and small-sized teleost species. The northern shrimp fishery in Skagerrak and the North Sea is not exempt from these problems. In this fishery, a 19-mm bar spacing Nordmøre-grid is mandatory to use, as well as a codend with a minimum mesh size of 35 mm. In the Norwegian waters of Skagerrak and the North Sea, the minimum legal total length of shrimp is 6.5 cm (approximately 15 mm CL), and real-time closures are enforced in areas where numbers of undersized shrimp exceed 15% of the total catch (Anonymous 2005)
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More From: Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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