Apparent abundance of yellowfin and bigeye tuna in the inshore, off shore and near oceanic ranges around Ceylon

Sri Lanka entered oceanic longline fishery in 1967 and have limited the areas of operation to the central equatorial belt, thus limiting their fishery to the yellowfin and bigeye tunas. Sri Lanka while developing her coastal fishery took a leap into oceanic longlining and in view of her programme for accelerated development of the fishing industry, has to fill the gap between the two fisheries by exploiting the intermediate range (off shore and near oceanic) which would chiefly be for tunas and sharks. The present paper has been prepared in this context, utilizing available data and information on the tuna longline fishery in the inshore (approximately 6-15 miles), off shore (approximately 15-100 miles) and near oceanic (approximately 100-300 miles) ranges (Fig, 1).

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sivasubramaniam, K.
Format: article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1971
Subjects:Fisheries, longlining, tuna fisheries, yellowfin tunas, bigeye tunas, fish resources exploitation, commercial fisheries, abundance, Sri Lanka,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/32605
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