Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches

Our analyses of observer records reveal that abundance estimates are strongly influenced by the timing of longline operations in relation to dawn and dusk and soak time—the amount of time that baited hooks are available in the water. Catch data will underestimate the total mortalityof several species because hooked animals are “lost at sea.” They fall off, are removed, or escape from the hookbefore the longline is retrieved. For example, longline segments with soak times of 20 hours were retrieved withfewer skipjack tuna and seabirds than segments with soak times of 5 hours.The mortality of some seabird species is up to 45% higher than previously estimated. The effects of soak time and timing vary considerably between species. Soak time and exposure to dusk periods have strong positive effects on the catch rates of many species. In particular, the catch rates of most shark and billfish species increase with soak time. At the end of longline retrieval, for example,expected catch rates for broadbill swordfish are four times those at the beginning of retrieval.Survival of the animal while it is hooked on the longline appears to be an important factor determining whether it is eventually brought on board the vessel. Catch rates of species that survive being hooked (e.g. blue shark) increase with soak time. In contrast, skipjack tuna and seabirds are usually dead at the time of retrieval. Theircatch rates decline with time, perhaps because scavengers can easily remove hooked animals that are dead.The results of our study have important implications for fishery management and assessments that rely on longline catch data. A reduction in soak time since longlining commenced in the 1950s has introduced a systematic biasin estimates of mortality levels and abundance. The abundance of species like seabirds has been over-estimatedin recent years. Simple modifications to procedures for data collection, such as recording the number of hooksretrieved without baits, would greatly improve mortality estimates.

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Main Authors: Ward, Peter, Myers, Ransom A., Blanchard, Wade
Format: article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:Ecology, Fisheries, Management,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/30894
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-308942021-07-01T02:48:18Z Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches Ward, Peter Myers, Ransom A. Blanchard, Wade Ecology Fisheries Management Our analyses of observer records reveal that abundance estimates are strongly influenced by the timing of longline operations in relation to dawn and dusk and soak time—the amount of time that baited hooks are available in the water. Catch data will underestimate the total mortalityof several species because hooked animals are “lost at sea.” They fall off, are removed, or escape from the hookbefore the longline is retrieved. For example, longline segments with soak times of 20 hours were retrieved withfewer skipjack tuna and seabirds than segments with soak times of 5 hours.The mortality of some seabird species is up to 45% higher than previously estimated. The effects of soak time and timing vary considerably between species. Soak time and exposure to dusk periods have strong positive effects on the catch rates of many species. In particular, the catch rates of most shark and billfish species increase with soak time. At the end of longline retrieval, for example,expected catch rates for broadbill swordfish are four times those at the beginning of retrieval.Survival of the animal while it is hooked on the longline appears to be an important factor determining whether it is eventually brought on board the vessel. Catch rates of species that survive being hooked (e.g. blue shark) increase with soak time. In contrast, skipjack tuna and seabirds are usually dead at the time of retrieval. Theircatch rates decline with time, perhaps because scavengers can easily remove hooked animals that are dead.The results of our study have important implications for fishery management and assessments that rely on longline catch data. A reduction in soak time since longlining commenced in the 1950s has introduced a systematic biasin estimates of mortality levels and abundance. The abundance of species like seabirds has been over-estimatedin recent years. Simple modifications to procedures for data collection, such as recording the number of hooksretrieved without baits, would greatly improve mortality estimates. 2021-06-24T17:03:01Z 2021-06-24T17:03:01Z 2004 article TRUE 0090-0656 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/30894 en http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1021/ward.pdf application/pdf application/pdf 179-195 http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/15040 403 2014-05-27 14:11:54 15040 United States National Marine Fisheries Service
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Ecology
Fisheries
Management
Ecology
Fisheries
Management
spellingShingle Ecology
Fisheries
Management
Ecology
Fisheries
Management
Ward, Peter
Myers, Ransom A.
Blanchard, Wade
Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches
description Our analyses of observer records reveal that abundance estimates are strongly influenced by the timing of longline operations in relation to dawn and dusk and soak time—the amount of time that baited hooks are available in the water. Catch data will underestimate the total mortalityof several species because hooked animals are “lost at sea.” They fall off, are removed, or escape from the hookbefore the longline is retrieved. For example, longline segments with soak times of 20 hours were retrieved withfewer skipjack tuna and seabirds than segments with soak times of 5 hours.The mortality of some seabird species is up to 45% higher than previously estimated. The effects of soak time and timing vary considerably between species. Soak time and exposure to dusk periods have strong positive effects on the catch rates of many species. In particular, the catch rates of most shark and billfish species increase with soak time. At the end of longline retrieval, for example,expected catch rates for broadbill swordfish are four times those at the beginning of retrieval.Survival of the animal while it is hooked on the longline appears to be an important factor determining whether it is eventually brought on board the vessel. Catch rates of species that survive being hooked (e.g. blue shark) increase with soak time. In contrast, skipjack tuna and seabirds are usually dead at the time of retrieval. Theircatch rates decline with time, perhaps because scavengers can easily remove hooked animals that are dead.The results of our study have important implications for fishery management and assessments that rely on longline catch data. A reduction in soak time since longlining commenced in the 1950s has introduced a systematic biasin estimates of mortality levels and abundance. The abundance of species like seabirds has been over-estimatedin recent years. Simple modifications to procedures for data collection, such as recording the number of hooksretrieved without baits, would greatly improve mortality estimates.
format article
topic_facet Ecology
Fisheries
Management
author Ward, Peter
Myers, Ransom A.
Blanchard, Wade
author_facet Ward, Peter
Myers, Ransom A.
Blanchard, Wade
author_sort Ward, Peter
title Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches
title_short Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches
title_full Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches
title_fullStr Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches
title_full_unstemmed Fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches
title_sort fish lost at sea: the effect of soak time on pelagic longline catches
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/30894
work_keys_str_mv AT wardpeter fishlostatseatheeffectofsoaktimeonpelagiclonglinecatches
AT myersransoma fishlostatseatheeffectofsoaktimeonpelagiclonglinecatches
AT blanchardwade fishlostatseatheeffectofsoaktimeonpelagiclonglinecatches
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