Effect of Extension Piece Design on Catch Patterns in a Mediterranean Bottom Trawl Fishery
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27312Date
2022-05-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Petetta, Andrea; Herrmann, Bent; Virgili, Massimo; Li Veli, Daniel; Brinkhof, Jesse; Lucchetti, AlessandroAbstract
The catch composition of bottom trawls is commonly refined and improved through
changes in codend design. Measures like reducing the number of meshes in codend
circumference or turning diamond netting by 90 degrees are well known to improve the
size selectivity of fish species with rounded cross-sectional shape. Based on this we
speculated whether the same measures, if applied in other parts of a bottom trawl, would
provide similar benefits as in the codend. Therefore, experiments were carried out by
deploying these changes to the trawl extension piece in a Mediterranean bottom trawl
fishery. However, for European hake and monkfish, results showed no indication of
improved selectivity or catch pattern compared to the standard extension piece in the
trawl. Contrary, for red mullet, one of the most important species in this fishery, reducing
the number of meshes in the circumference of the extension piece jeopardized the size
selection obtained in the trawl with a standard extension piece. The lesson learnt from this
study was that the design changes that work for the codend do not necessarily work for
other parts of the trawl. In fact, they can even have negative effects.
Publisher
Frontiers MediaCitation
Petetta, Herrmann, Virgili, Li Veli, Brinkhof, Lucchetti. Effect of Extension Piece Design on Catch Patterns in a Mediterranean Bottom Trawl Fishery. Frontiers in Marine Science. 2022;9Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2022 The Author(s)