Untrawlable Bottom in Shrimp Statistical Zones of the Northwest Gulf of Mexico


Autoria(s): Link , Jason
Data(s)

1997

Resumo

The Gulf of Mexico Fisheries Management Council tasked the National Marine Fisheries Service with determining the extent, if any, of loss oft rawlable bottom in the Gulf of Mexico based upon fishing industry concerns. There are approximately 31 million hectares in the 21 shrimp statistical zones in the Gulf, approximately 23 million hectares of waters that are <35 fathoms (where most shrimp trawling effort occurs), and approximately 11 million hectares in zones 10-21, <35f athoms, which were examined. There are 31,338 known hangs, snags, artificial reefs, hazards to navigation, oil rigs, and similar obstructions which cause trawling to be unfeasible in these zones. There are several refuge (i.e. untrawlable) areas associated with the Alabama Artificial Reefs. Conservatively assuming 1 hectare for each known obstruction, coupled with the known area of each refuge, the estimate of total untrawlable bottom in zones 10-21 less than 35 fathoms in the Gulf is 185,953 hectares, or roughly 1.7% of this total trawlable area. Sensitivity analysis demonstrated the robustness of this assumption, with a range of 0.3-4.3% possible. In specific shrimp zones, untrawlable area is much less than 1% except in zones 10 (26%) and 11(2.5%), both of which possess a refuge. Other than the implementation periods of these refugia, no temporal trends were detectable with respect to the amount of untrawlable bottom.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/9814/1/mfr5945.pdf

Link , Jason (1997) Untrawlable Bottom in Shrimp Statistical Zones of the Northwest Gulf of Mexico. Marine Fisheries Review, 59(4), pp. 33-36.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/9814/

http://spo.nmfs.noaa.gov/mfr594/mfr5945.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Biology #Ecology #Fisheries #Management
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed