Abstract

Abstract An experiment was conducted in early summer 1995 to determine the survival rate of sublegal-size (<33 cm total length) blue cod Parapercis colias after being captured and returned to the sea by amateur fishers using two types of hooks (6/0 and 1/0). At the same time, commercial cod pots captured blue cod for use as a control group. As fish were caught, they were subjected to either good or poor handling techniques and then placed into holding pots built specifically for the experiment. These were lowered to the sea floor and sequentially monitored during daylight hours for 2 weeks. No mortality of blue cod occurred with the 6/0 hooks, but fish caught using 1/0 hooks suffered 25% mortality by the end of the experiment. No control fish died during the experiment, and the type of handling technique used had no detectable effect on blue cod survival. The fact that all mortality occurred within 26 h, combined with observations of fish behavior, suggests that mortality was induced by blood loss rather ...

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