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Published byEmery Scott Modified over 8 years ago
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Passive Fish Capture
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Collection Methods All are biased!
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Fishery sampling gears generally categorized as active or passive; Toxicants (poisons) and electrofishing don’t fit these categories well.
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Passive entanglement gear Passive: gear is relatively stationary, and fish come to gear Entanglement: they get tangled General advantages of passive gear: -- simple design and construction -- relatively low cost -- require little specialized training
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If a gear is efficient for a species, then CPUE (catch-per-unit-effort) should be directly proportional to the abundance of fish in the populations. Thus, CPUE is an INDEX to abundance. Catch per day Population size of fish
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General disadvantages of passive gear: -- rely on fish activity: if they are not moving, you won’t catch them -- may damage bycatch -- can be selective for species, size, sex... (more on this later)
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Most common example probably is the gill net
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“Experimental” gill net has multiple panels of various mesh sizes Example: 6 panels -- 0.5, 0.75, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5 in (bar measure)
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Monofilament vs. multifilament Monofilament gill nets typically catch more fish Size structure similar between net types for most species Monofilament nets easier to run
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Experimental Gill Net Catch
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Species effectively captured: Gill nets most effective on fusiform (torpedo- shaped) fishes such as Northern Pike, Walleye, Yellow Perch, trout and salmon, etc. Largemouth Bass avoid gill nets
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Considerations: Gill nets can cause substantial mortality Short-term sets can alleviate some of problem Most biologists prefer to use most benign gear that is still effective
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Trammel Net Typically constructed of three mesh panels: two outer panels have large mesh, and the middle panel is small mesh. Thus, thefish get caught in a “bag.”
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Trammel nets Commonly used in commercial fisheries Target species: catfishes, catostomids, Common Carp.
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Passive Entrapment Gear Entrapment: fish typically retained by some type of “funnel” Trap (modified fyke) nets and hoop nets most commonly used
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Minnow Trap
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Fyke Net
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Species effectively captured by trap nets: Most effective on species that seek cover, such as crappies and sunfishes Often effective for collection of spawning Northern Pike or Walleye Largemouth Bass avoid trap nets
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Species effectively captured by hoop nets Often used in flowing waters; often baited Catfishes Suckers: buffalo fishes, carpsuckers Crappies and sunfishes Considerations Both trap and hoop nets inflict little mortality; most fishes can be released alive Bigmouth Buffalo Fish River Carpsucker
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Pot Gears -e.g., lobster, eel & crab pots, fish traps -construction of wood, metal or plastic -equipped w/funnels to prevent escape -used for bottom-dwelling or cavity-seeking spp. -commonly baited -often fished in large numbers
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Ghost Fishing
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