On board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central California, May 1987 to December 1991

From May 1987 to June 1990 and from August to December 1991Fishery Technicians sampled catches on board 690 CommercialPassenger Fishing Vessel (CPFV) trips targeting rockfish and lingcod from the general port areas of Fort Bragg, Bodega Bay, San Francisco, Monterey, and Morro Bay. Data are presented for species composition by port area, year, and month, for catch-per-unit-effort, mean length, and length frequency of lingcod and the 18 most frequently observed rockfish species, and for trends in fishing effort related to fishing time, depth, and distance from port. Total catch estimates are presented based on unadjusted logbook records, logbook records adjusted by sampling data and compliance rates, and effort data from a marine recreational fishing statistics survey. Average catch of kept fish per angler day was 11.8 and average catch of kept fish per angler hour was 3.7. A trend of an increasing frequency of trips to deep (>40 fm) locations was observed in the Bodega Bay, San Francisco, and Monterey areas from 1988 to 1990-91. No trend was evident relative to trip frequency and distance from port.A total of 74 species was observed caught during the study.Rockfishes comprised 88.5% to 97.9% by number of the observed catch by port area. The five most frequently observed species were chilipepper, blue, yellowtail, and widow rockfishes, and bocaccio, with lingcod ranking seventh.In general, mean length and catch-per-angler-hour of sportfishes caught by CPFV anglers varied considerably and did not show steady declines during the study period. However, port-specific areas of major concern were identified forchilipepper, lingcod, and black rockfish, and to a lesserextent brown, canary, vermilion, yelloweye, olive, and widow rockfish. These areas of concern included steadily declining catch rate, steadily declining mean length, and a high percentage of sexually immature fish in the sampled-catch.Recent sampling of the commercial hook-and-line fishery innorthern and central California indicated that most species of rockfishes taken by CPFV anglers are also harvested commercially. (261pp.)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Reilly, Paul N., Wilson-Vandenberg, Deb, Watters, Diana L., Hardwick, James E., Short, Duncan
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: California Department of Fish and Game, Marine Resources Division 1993
Subjects:Management, Fisheries, rockfish, lingcod, sport fishing, California,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18083
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-180832021-06-26T05:37:18Z On board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central California, May 1987 to December 1991 Reilly, Paul N. Wilson-Vandenberg, Deb Watters, Diana L. Hardwick, James E. Short, Duncan Management Fisheries rockfish lingcod sport fishing California From May 1987 to June 1990 and from August to December 1991Fishery Technicians sampled catches on board 690 CommercialPassenger Fishing Vessel (CPFV) trips targeting rockfish and lingcod from the general port areas of Fort Bragg, Bodega Bay, San Francisco, Monterey, and Morro Bay. Data are presented for species composition by port area, year, and month, for catch-per-unit-effort, mean length, and length frequency of lingcod and the 18 most frequently observed rockfish species, and for trends in fishing effort related to fishing time, depth, and distance from port. Total catch estimates are presented based on unadjusted logbook records, logbook records adjusted by sampling data and compliance rates, and effort data from a marine recreational fishing statistics survey. Average catch of kept fish per angler day was 11.8 and average catch of kept fish per angler hour was 3.7. A trend of an increasing frequency of trips to deep (>40 fm) locations was observed in the Bodega Bay, San Francisco, and Monterey areas from 1988 to 1990-91. No trend was evident relative to trip frequency and distance from port.A total of 74 species was observed caught during the study.Rockfishes comprised 88.5% to 97.9% by number of the observed catch by port area. The five most frequently observed species were chilipepper, blue, yellowtail, and widow rockfishes, and bocaccio, with lingcod ranking seventh.In general, mean length and catch-per-angler-hour of sportfishes caught by CPFV anglers varied considerably and did not show steady declines during the study period. However, port-specific areas of major concern were identified forchilipepper, lingcod, and black rockfish, and to a lesserextent brown, canary, vermilion, yelloweye, olive, and widow rockfish. These areas of concern included steadily declining catch rate, steadily declining mean length, and a high percentage of sexually immature fish in the sampled-catch.Recent sampling of the commercial hook-and-line fishery innorthern and central California indicated that most species of rockfishes taken by CPFV anglers are also harvested commercially. (261pp.) 2021-06-24T14:44:59Z 2021-06-24T14:44:59Z 1993 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18083 en Marine Resources Administrative Report application/pdf application/pdf California Department of Fish and Game, Marine Resources Division Monterey, CA http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/110 8 2011-09-29 22:34:39 110 California Department of Fish and Game
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 Management
Fisheries
rockfish
lingcod
sport fishing
California
Management
Fisheries
rockfish
lingcod
sport fishing
California
spellingShingle Management
Fisheries
rockfish
lingcod
sport fishing
California
Management
Fisheries
rockfish
lingcod
sport fishing
California
Reilly, Paul N.
Wilson-Vandenberg, Deb
Watters, Diana L.
Hardwick, James E.
Short, Duncan
On board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central California, May 1987 to December 1991
description From May 1987 to June 1990 and from August to December 1991Fishery Technicians sampled catches on board 690 CommercialPassenger Fishing Vessel (CPFV) trips targeting rockfish and lingcod from the general port areas of Fort Bragg, Bodega Bay, San Francisco, Monterey, and Morro Bay. Data are presented for species composition by port area, year, and month, for catch-per-unit-effort, mean length, and length frequency of lingcod and the 18 most frequently observed rockfish species, and for trends in fishing effort related to fishing time, depth, and distance from port. Total catch estimates are presented based on unadjusted logbook records, logbook records adjusted by sampling data and compliance rates, and effort data from a marine recreational fishing statistics survey. Average catch of kept fish per angler day was 11.8 and average catch of kept fish per angler hour was 3.7. A trend of an increasing frequency of trips to deep (>40 fm) locations was observed in the Bodega Bay, San Francisco, and Monterey areas from 1988 to 1990-91. No trend was evident relative to trip frequency and distance from port.A total of 74 species was observed caught during the study.Rockfishes comprised 88.5% to 97.9% by number of the observed catch by port area. The five most frequently observed species were chilipepper, blue, yellowtail, and widow rockfishes, and bocaccio, with lingcod ranking seventh.In general, mean length and catch-per-angler-hour of sportfishes caught by CPFV anglers varied considerably and did not show steady declines during the study period. However, port-specific areas of major concern were identified forchilipepper, lingcod, and black rockfish, and to a lesserextent brown, canary, vermilion, yelloweye, olive, and widow rockfish. These areas of concern included steadily declining catch rate, steadily declining mean length, and a high percentage of sexually immature fish in the sampled-catch.Recent sampling of the commercial hook-and-line fishery innorthern and central California indicated that most species of rockfishes taken by CPFV anglers are also harvested commercially. (261pp.)
format monograph
topic_facet Management
Fisheries
rockfish
lingcod
sport fishing
California
author Reilly, Paul N.
Wilson-Vandenberg, Deb
Watters, Diana L.
Hardwick, James E.
Short, Duncan
author_facet Reilly, Paul N.
Wilson-Vandenberg, Deb
Watters, Diana L.
Hardwick, James E.
Short, Duncan
author_sort Reilly, Paul N.
title On board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central California, May 1987 to December 1991
title_short On board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central California, May 1987 to December 1991
title_full On board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central California, May 1987 to December 1991
title_fullStr On board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central California, May 1987 to December 1991
title_full_unstemmed On board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central California, May 1987 to December 1991
title_sort on board sampling of the rockfish and lingcod commerical passenger fishing vessel industry in northern and central california, may 1987 to december 1991
publisher California Department of Fish and Game, Marine Resources Division
publishDate 1993
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18083
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