Abstract

Pelagic trawls are one of the primary methods of sampling midwater fishes. However, these trawls are species- and size-selective, and small fish can escape through trawl meshes. This can introduce uncertainty and bias into survey abundance estimates if not accounted for. The small, abundant pelagic fishes of the Alaska Arctic are challenging to sample with trawls as they are sufficiently motile to avoid small fine-mesh trawls but are also small enough to escape through the meshes of trawls designed to capture larger fishes. A pelagic herring trawl equipped with a fine-mesh codend liner was used to quantify the size and species composition of pelagic fishes during a baseline acoustic-trawl survey of the Chukchi Shelf. Subsequent experiments with recapture nets attached to the outside of the trawl netting suggested that escapement of small fishes was substantial, particularly in the aft net section. Thus, the trawl was further modified by reducing the taper in the aft net section and adding a small-mesh section in front of the codend to potentially reduce escapement. Further use of recapture nets during two subsequent acoustic-trawl surveys confirmed that this trawl modification substantially increased retention of small fishes and resulted in less size selectivity. These improvements will reduce biases in estimates of abundance, size, and species composition of pelagic Arctic fishes. This work highlights the importance of quantifying escapement from survey trawls and demonstrates that escapement estimates can guide successful trawl modifications.

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