Ceylon's beach seine fishery


Autoria(s): Canagaratnam, P.; Medcof, J.C.
Data(s)

1955

Resumo

Setting a net in the water and hauling it up onto the beach manually by its two ends is one of the oldest methods of catching fish and it is still employed in several parts of the world: Ceylon is one of these. Here there are several hundreds of beach seines operated by several thousands of fishermen and they contribute 35-40% of Ceylon's total annual fish catch. This means that beach seining been and still is Ceylon's most important single method of fishing. In recent years the beach seine fishery has encountered difficulties which threaten its existence and the seiners have appealed repeatedly to the Department of Fisheries to undertake remedial action. There have been many and conflicting representations as to what this action should be, and the Department is seeking for a wise course through the confusion. As part of its search it asked its Research Division in April 1953, to undertake a study of the seine fishery to describe it, study the nature of its problems and to present any recommendations that seemed appropriate and consistent with the welfare of the fishing industry as a whole. The following is a report on the preliminary phases of that study.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/16273/1/NARA4.pdf

Canagaratnam, P. and Medcof, J.C. (1955) Ceylon's beach seine fishery. Bulletin of the Fisheries Research Station, Ceylon, 4, pp. 1-32.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/16273/

Palavras-Chave #Fisheries
Tipo

Article

NonPeerReviewed