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Abstract
Commercial fisheries exploiting the demersal resources of Western Adriatic Sea produce high bycatch and discard rates; the most important are bottom trawls, hydraulic dredges and passive nets. The five papers here published assess these fisheries’ impacts and investigate the potential of specific solutions to promote more sustainable exploitation. Papers I, II, III focused on bottom trawl fishery. Paper I compared the catch performance of the two legal codends by accounting for the entire species community in trawl catches. 50% of the catch in weight and 80% in count numbers consisted of discarded species, highlighting the severe impact of this fishery. Paper II estimated the selectivity of experimental codend having meshes turned 90° (T90) and of traditional diamond mesh codend with same mesh size. The T90 codend improved the size selection for all the target species. Paper III investigated the use of T90 meshes in the extension piece together with a reduction in mesh number at extension circumference. Results revealed that both these changes applied in the extension piece did not improve the selectivity of the main target species. Paper IV focused on hydraulic dredge fishery targeting the striped venus clam by assessing the clams’ size selection process operated by the dredge. 25% of the clams caught were not size selected due to clogging phenomenon in the dredge. The clam length with 50% retention probability was 18.9 mm, highlighting that the additional size selection process of sorting sieve is necessary to land only the legal clams >22 mm. Paper V compared the catch performance of innovative fish pots and of traditional trammel net. A similar catch efficiency between the two gears for the commercial portion was observed, while the trammel net produced significantly more discards in terms of species number and weight. All the results are discussed in fisheries management perspective.
Abstract
Commercial fisheries exploiting the demersal resources of Western Adriatic Sea produce high bycatch and discard rates; the most important are bottom trawls, hydraulic dredges and passive nets. The five papers here published assess these fisheries’ impacts and investigate the potential of specific solutions to promote more sustainable exploitation. Papers I, II, III focused on bottom trawl fishery. Paper I compared the catch performance of the two legal codends by accounting for the entire species community in trawl catches. 50% of the catch in weight and 80% in count numbers consisted of discarded species, highlighting the severe impact of this fishery. Paper II estimated the selectivity of experimental codend having meshes turned 90° (T90) and of traditional diamond mesh codend with same mesh size. The T90 codend improved the size selection for all the target species. Paper III investigated the use of T90 meshes in the extension piece together with a reduction in mesh number at extension circumference. Results revealed that both these changes applied in the extension piece did not improve the selectivity of the main target species. Paper IV focused on hydraulic dredge fishery targeting the striped venus clam by assessing the clams’ size selection process operated by the dredge. 25% of the clams caught were not size selected due to clogging phenomenon in the dredge. The clam length with 50% retention probability was 18.9 mm, highlighting that the additional size selection process of sorting sieve is necessary to land only the legal clams >22 mm. Paper V compared the catch performance of innovative fish pots and of traditional trammel net. A similar catch efficiency between the two gears for the commercial portion was observed, while the trammel net produced significantly more discards in terms of species number and weight. All the results are discussed in fisheries management perspective.
Tipologia del documento
Tesi di dottorato
Autore
Petetta, Andrea
Supervisore
Co-supervisore
Dottorato di ricerca
Ciclo
35
Coordinatore
Settore disciplinare
Settore concorsuale
Parole chiave
Selectivity; bycatch; discards; discard reduction; fisheries impact; Mediterranean demersal fisheries; bottom trawling; trawl codends; T90; extension piece; catch comparison; hydraulic dredge; Chamelea gallina; alternative gear; pots; sustainable fishery; set nets
URN:NBN
DOI
10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/10809
Data di discussione
16 Giugno 2023
URI
Altri metadati
Tipologia del documento
Tesi di dottorato
Autore
Petetta, Andrea
Supervisore
Co-supervisore
Dottorato di ricerca
Ciclo
35
Coordinatore
Settore disciplinare
Settore concorsuale
Parole chiave
Selectivity; bycatch; discards; discard reduction; fisheries impact; Mediterranean demersal fisheries; bottom trawling; trawl codends; T90; extension piece; catch comparison; hydraulic dredge; Chamelea gallina; alternative gear; pots; sustainable fishery; set nets
URN:NBN
DOI
10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/10809
Data di discussione
16 Giugno 2023
URI
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