Semi-pelagic Longline and Trammel Net Elasmobranch Catches in Southern Portugal: Catch Composition, Catch Rates and Discards


Autoria(s): Coelho, Rui; Karim, Erzini; Bentes, Luís; Correia, Carla; Lino, Pedro G.; Monteiro, Pedro; Ribeiro, Joaquim; Gonçalves, J. M. S.
Data(s)

18/01/2017

18/01/2017

2004

Resumo

In Portugal, elasmobranch landings have decreased substantially in recent years. In this work, elasmobranch catches in semi-pelagic longlines (1997 and 1998) were compared with those in trammel nets (2000) in the Algarve, southern Portugal areas. In the semi-pelagic longline fi shery, 7 elasmobranch species represented 33.4% (2 185 specimens) of the total fi sh catches. Among the elasmobranch species, the most abundant were Galeus melastomus (63.3%), Etmopterus pusillus (21.7%) and Scyliorhinus canicula (14.2%). Most of these elasmobranchs were discarded (68.3% in total). In the trammel net fi shery, 16 different elasmobranch species represented 4.3% (597 specimens) of total fi sh catches and the most important species were Raja undulata (43.6%) and S. canicula (10.2%). The majority of the elasmobranchs caught in trammel nets had commercial value, and only 5.4% were discarded. In both fi sheries, intra-specifi c catch rates varied with depth. Length-frequency distributions for the only species with relatively high catches in both fi sheries, S. canicula, showed that, in general, trammel nets catch larger specimens and in a narrower length range than do longlines.

info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Identificador

0250-6408

AUT: RMS01092; KER00534; JGO02808

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/8954

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization

Direitos

openAccess

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Palavras-Chave #Catch composition #Catch rate #Discard #Longline #Portugal #Trammel net
Tipo

article