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Vitality insights of fish escaping from a sorting grid installed on a bottom trawl net

Abstract

Sorting grids to exclude the juveniles of species targeted by bottom trawl fisheries from the catch are among the most promising solutions to reduce discards. We tested a two-sections Juveniles’ Sorting Grid (JSG) in a Mediterranean fisheries restricted area. First, we provided information on the vitality of individuals escaping from the JSG bars during towing, by analysing underwater footage. Then, we evaluated the catch performance of the JSG-equipped trawl compared to a standard trawl by analysing both the full species community in the catches and the main commercial species. The probability for individuals to be alive while escaping from JSG was always higher than 65% (on average), with some species (e.g. red mullet, gurnards, 91–99% on average) showing significantly higher probability than others (e.g. European hake, crustaceans, 65–82% on average). The installation of a JSG in the trawl net did not change the overall catch composition in the codend, although significant differences were observed at the single species level. The JSG was effective at reducing undersized individuals of European hake, although a loss of legal-sized individuals was observed due to escapement. A significantly lower retention of the JSG-equipped trawl was also observed for other commercial species, such as deep-water rose shrimp and broadtail shortfin squid.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Andrea Petetta
  • Bent Herrmann
  • Daniel Li Veli
  • Giovanni Canduci
  • Ivan Tatone
  • Sara Bonanomi
  • Lorenzo Jacopo De Santis
  • Giordano Giuliani
  • Massimo Virgili
  • Paolo Carpentieri
  • Alessandro Lucchetti

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Ocean / Fisheries and New Biomarine Industry
  • Technical University of Denmark
  • Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
  • National Research Council
  • UiT The Arctic University of Norway

Date

02.01.2025

Year

2025

Published in

Scientific Reports

Volume

15

Issue

1

Page(s)

1 - 21

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository