Abstract

Fishing closures, commonly used to manage fisheries’ catch, involve temporarily closing a body of water to particular fishing gears to control fishing effort and protect feeding and spawning areas. In recent years in Qiantang River of China, with the socio-economic development, protection of fish stock has become increasingly urgent. The year 2019 was the first year that Qiantang River was included in the unified fishing ban system for the south of Yangtze River basin. Here, fish captures and hydroacoustic surveys were carried out in the research area of Qiantang River in order to present comparative descriptions of the dominant fish species, the temporal changes of fish size, density, biomass, and distribution affected by the four-month fishing closure in 2019. The results showed that Pseudobrama simoni (Bleeker, 1864) was the most dominant species both before and after the closure by using the traditional capture method. The mean target strength (TS) of overall fish after closure was –50.28 ± 0.19 dB, which was lower than that before, resulting in a significantly shorter derived mean length (13.42 ± 0.74 cm). The mean fish density and calculated biomass after closure were both significantly higher than that before it. More than 50% of fish species were distributed in the water of 5–20 m depth after the closure, which likely occurred in water deeper than 20 m before. Meanwhile, fewer outliers were found in different depth categories after closure. It is concluded that the four-month closure in 2019 had a positive effect on fish size, density, and biomass, leading to protection of pelagic fishes and a more even distribution of fish.

Highlights

  • Given the increased use of modern fishing devices, many marine and freshwater fish resources are intensively exploited, resulting in rapid declines in some fish stock, affecting national economies, local communities’ socio-economic well-being, and even their protein saecurity (Tang and Chen 2004; Branch et al 2011)

  • As a frequently used tool to control fishing effort and protect feeding and spawning areas, time-area fishing closure measure has been taken into account by governments of many countries

  • The year 2019 was the first year that Qiantang River was included in the unified fishing ban system for the south of Yangtze River basin

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Summary

Introduction

Given the increased use of modern fishing devices, many marine and freshwater fish resources are intensively exploited, resulting in rapid declines in some fish stock, affecting national economies, local communities’ socio-economic well-being, and even their protein saecurity (Tang and Chen 2004; Branch et al 2011). As a frequently used tool to control fishing effort and protect feeding and spawning areas, time-area fishing closure measure has been taken into account by governments of many countries. The effect of this measure has been assessed on fishing strategies regarding the fishing mode, variations in the population structure of a particular fish, incidental megafauna catches, and social well-being impacts (Britton 2014; Escalle et al 2016; O’Farrell et al 2016), but more rarely, on overall fish stock. Zhang et al.: The time-area fishing closure impacts on fish stock of Qiantang River. What happened to fish stock after a four-month fishing closure in 2019?

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