Abstract

We examined the effects of different hook style and bait type combinations on the catches of targeted, bycatch, and discarded fishes in equatorial atlantic waters. in total, 221 longline sets (>305,000 hooks) were deployed from portuguese pelagic longline vessels (sElEct-pal project) during the february-october fishing season. Three different hook styles and two bait types were tested: the traditional J-hook was compared to two circle hooks (one non-offset and one with 10° offset), and squid bait was compared to mackerel. catch per unit effort (cpuEs) were calculated and compared between the different hook style and bait type combinations, which indicated that the effects of hook style and bait on the cpuEs were species-specific. for example, swordfish cpuEs were higher with J-hooks baited with squid, while for targeted tunas and blue shark only the bait effect was significant, but with opposite effect (i.e., higher catches of tuna with squid bait and higher catches of blue shark with mackerel bait). for the discarded species, at-haulback mortality was also species-specific. proportions of alive vs dead specimens at time of fishing gear retrieval did not vary significantly by hook style or bait type combinations. The total retained catch was analyzed in value per unit effort (VpuE), and indicated losses in fishery revenue when mackerel was used instead of squid, but not when circle hooks were used instead of J-hooks.

Highlights

  • We examined the effects of different hook style and bait type combinations on the catches of targeted, bycatch, and discarded fishes in equatorial Atlantic waters

  • There were species-specific differences for the non-target species that were retained, with the overall teleost bycatch rates being highest with J-hooks baited with squid, and the overall elasmobranch bycatch rates being highest with circle hooks baited with mackerel

  • Odds-ratios Estimate Lower CI Upper CI. This is the first study on the effects of hook style and bait type on the catch rates of targeted, bycatch, and discarded fish species in the Portuguese pelagic longline fishery operating in Atlantic equatorial waters

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Summary

Introduction

We examined the effects of different hook style and bait type combinations on the catches of targeted, bycatch, and discarded fishes in equatorial Atlantic waters. Some of the most common strategies to reduce bycatch in pelagic longline fisheries involve gear modifications such as changes in hook style and bait type. The efficiency of such gear modifications is taxon-specific, and depends on the particular fishery and fishing fleet Given these complexities that involve possible modifications to Bulletin of Marine Science. Prior to the present study, no circle hooks have been used or tested commercially by the Portuguese fleet apart from some experiments supported by the US Government between 2000 and 2002 in the Azores Archipelago (Bolden and Bjorndal 2005) These results have not been published in the literature

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