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8. Bycatch in single or few species fisheries

The discarding of fish at sea can occur when fish of a commercial species is caught but it is either commercially not worth keeping or is prohibited by law to keep it. This may be because the fish is of the wrong sex, size, or quality or the vessel which caught is prohibited from landing that particular species. It is recognised as a problem in a number of fisheries and attempts are now being made to quantify and qualify the amount of fish discarded in this way. This section outlines some of the recent work that has been done to both identify the amount and species of bycatch fish in those fisheries where there are a relatively small number of species in the fishery ecosystem and affected by the fishing activity. The meeting in Tokyo in 1996 on Reduction of Wastage in Fisheries (FAO 1996a) contained presentations from a number of experts who work in these types of fisheries and which refined earlier estimates of discarded catch from various regions of the world. These papers have been used extensively, but not exclusively, in the following sections. This gives indications of the quantity of discards and the methods that are being employed to alleviate the problems, recognising that generally the emphasis is normally on reduction of potential discards rather than the utilisation of them.

8.1 North East Pacific (Alaska - Bering Sea)

Extensive programmes of monitoring and collection of data from fisheries takes place in United States of America. This makes the possibility of identification of species and quantities discarded at sea possible in some of the fisheries. This collection of data, by direct observation, has been most extensive in the fisheries of the Bering Sea and the Gulf of Alaska. Here, since 1990, groundfish vessels above 125 ft LOA were required to carry a biological observer 100% of the time and 30% of the effort of boats between 60 and 125 ft is monitored. This means that for the last few years information on the amounts of catch and the discards on much of the fleet operating in this area has become available with some accuracy. This has generated a, probably unique, data base from which information on the quantity of discards of particular species of fish from particular fishing operations can be calculated. Alverson et al include information derived from this data on specific species discarded in the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands fisheries in 1992, in two tables one related to trawl fisheries and the other hook and line fisheries. These indicate that the amount of discarded catch of different species were as shown in Table 1 below.

Table 1 - Discards of groundfish in the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands - 1992

Species

Discarded by trawls (tonnes)

Discarded by Hook and line (tonnes)

Total (tonnes)

Pollock

75,734

283

 
Sablefish

5

20

 
Atka mackerel

6,453

61

 
Pacific cod

11,265

67

 
Pacific ocean perch

2,218

23

 
Yellowfin sole

31,252

780

 
Flounder

24,007

323

 
Turbot

223

8,131

 
Rocksole

21,829

81

 
Other

14,664

244

 
Rockfish

631

1,336

 
Arrowtooth flounder

6,738

2,558

 
Halibut

5,136

6,958

 

et al Tables 22 & 23. (NMFS special data run)

The total amount of fish of the above species landed and used amounted to over 1.4 million tonnes. The reason the above were discarded are various. There is for instance a ban on landing of halibut in the region so that all halibut from what ever gear is discarded. In pollock trawl fisheries small pollock make up 60 -70 % of the discards because they are either legally undersize or not commercially worth landing. Similarly in the Atka mackerel fishery 60 % of the discards are of Atka mackerel. However small cod in the cod trawl fishery make up less than 10% of the discards with other species such as pollock, rocksole, arrowtooth flounder and Atka mackerel making up the rest. In addition to these extensive observer programmes the North Pacific Fishery Management Council have instituted controls since 1986 on the amount of bycatch that can be taken in the ground fish fleet. (Smith 1993) Recognising that groundfish fisheries not only take small specimens of their own targets but also specimens of target species of other fisheries such as halibut, crab, herring and salmon these species were given a Prohibited Species Catch (PSC) limit to target fisheries for bycatch species.

8.2 North West Atlantic (Canada)

The information in Table 2 below taken from a paper on discards in the fisheries of Canada in the Atlantic Ocean (Duthie 1996) gives the amount of all species discarded by each type of gear and the target.

Canada now has a regulatory requirement in the groundfish fishery that all catches and bycatches are landed. This is considered reasonably effective, particularly on larger vessels which are required to have 100% observer coverage. This implies of course that there are now no discards at all in these fisheries. This may not in fact be true but as with the banning of discards in other countries it makes the industry move towards the elimination of unwanted catch voluntarily. The use of separator grates and other bycatch reduction measures has been regulated for alongside the discard ban.

Table 2 - 1994 Estimated discards from the Atlantic Canada fisheries

Gear Species

DISCARD TOTAL

Traps Pots

Bottom Trawl

Mid Water Trawl

Set Net/ Gill Net

Purse Seine

Other

Cod

5,053

 

2,765

 

296

 

2,001

Hake (Misc.)

149

 

27

     

122

Greenland halibut

3,195

 

58

 

3,137

   
Pollock (Saithe)

4,184

 

3,053

 

411

 

720

Redfish

2,099

 

1,909

188

   

2

Haddock

1,842

 

1,374

 

30

 

438

Rays

32

 

32

       
Atlantic herring

333

     

83

250

 
Mackerel

285

161

     

124

 
Northern prawn

2,725

 

2,725

       
Salmon

7

     

7

   
Queen crab

12,979

12,979

         
Sea scallop

22,846

 

22,846

       
Blue mussel

0

           
Clams (Misc.)

2,610

         

2,610

Lobster

12,397

12,397

         
Short fin squid

153

 

153

       
Other

7,871

923

3,562

   

359

3,027

TOTALS

78,760

26,460

38,504

188

3,,964

733

8,920

8.3 North East Atlantic and North Sea

The major fisheries of the North Sea and the Celtic Sea are governed in part under the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) of the European Union (EU). The CFP has provisions to enable the introduction of measures in five areas to control and regulate fisheries in EU waters. These include total allowable catches (TAC) and quotas, technical measures, structural policy, marketing policy and access to third countries waters.

The implementation of restrictive TAC designed for conservation of stocks simply seems to exacerbate the problem of illegal landings and wasteful discarding in the North Sea cod fishery according to Salz P (Ed) (1996).

The flatfish fishery of the north sea has TACs for plaice and sole but not for the other flat fish species such as witch, turbot, brill, megrim, dab, and flounder although there are minimum landing sizes for these species. There are also mesh size regulations. The general minimum mesh size for demersal trawling in the North Sea is 100 mm, however there are exceptions for certain fisheries. When fishing for sole, for instance south of 55oN a minimum mesh size of 80 mm is allowed as long as the catch is at least 5% sole and no more than 10% of the catch is composed of cod, haddock or saithe. The minimum landing size for plaice is larger than that for sole and in using the 80 mm mesh undersize plaice are caught. This situation leads to substantial discards of undersized plaice by the fishermen to avoid landing of undersized fish and to ensure that the proportion conform with the regulations.

In the North Sea documentation of catches of haddock and whiting over recent years through at sea sampling have allowed an assessment to be made of the discarding of the target species of these two species. This data indicates that significant quantities of both species are discarded. See Table 3 below.

Table 3 - Annual weight of haddock and whiting in human consumption landings, discards, and bycatch of the industrial fishery

North Sea Haddock

Year Total Catch

(tonnes x 1000)

Landing for Human consumption

(tonnes x 1000)

Discards

(tonnes x 1000)

Industrial bycatch

(tonnes x 1000)

1980

216

99

95

22

1981

207

130

60

17

1982

226

166

41

19

1983

238

159

66

13

1984

213

128

75

10

1985

251

159

86

6

1986

220

166

52

3

1987

172

108

59

4

1988

171

105

62

4

1989

104

76

26

2

1990

87

51

33

3

1991

90

44

40

5

Average/year        

North Sea Whiting

Year Total Catch

(tonnes x 1000)

Landing for Human consumption

(tonnes x 1000)

Discards

(tonnes x 1000)

Industrial bycatch

(tonnes x 1000)

1980

212

91

76

46

1981

181

79

35

67

1982

129

71

26

33

1983

151

79

48

24

1984

135

77

39

19

1985

97

54

28

15

1986

154

58

78

18

1987

132

62

53

16

1988

127

51

28

49

1989

118

40

35

43

1990

147

42

54

51

1991

117

46

33

38

Average/year        

More recently a paper by Smith of FAO (Smith 1996) attempted to estimate discards on a gear by gear basis for the major types of fishery in the North Sea and N E Atlantic. The results of the analysis made by Smith are given in Table 4.

Table 4 - Estimates of discards in the North Sea and North Atlantic

Type of Fishery and Species

Discards in Tons

%age of Total

Pelagic Food Fish
Herring

22,140

0.87%

Pilchard

4,480

0.18%

Atlantic mackerel

11,220

0.44%

Horse mackerel

7,380

0.29%

Sprat

10,360

0.41%

Sub total

55,580

2.19%

Fish for Fishmeal
Capelin

15,380

0.60%

Blue whiting

5,220

0.21%

Sandeels

17,380

0.68%

Norway pout

3,980

0.16%

Assorted pelagics

2,240

0.09%

Sub total

44,200

1.74%

Human Food Fish
Atlantic cod

816,000

32.08%

Haddock

230,000

9.04%

Saithe

163,000

6.41%

Redfishes

248,000

9.75%

Whiting

67,500

2.65%

Plaice

153,000

6.02%

Ass demersals

766,000

30.12%

Sub total

2,443,500

96.08%

GRAND TOTAL

2,543,280

A major problem with the fisheries of the North Sea is that there are a number of major species of gadoid fish all able to be caught with similar gear but with differing growth patterns and optimal sizes for harvesting but with overlapping areas of abundance e.g. cod, haddock, saithe and whiting. The fact that the various species mature at different sizes requires that the permitted catch sizes for the different species should be different and therefore the mesh sizes of the cod ends required to catch them are correspondingly different. This means that a suitable mesh size to catch haddock for instance will catch cod (which matures at a larger size) which are under size.

It is estimated that the amount, in terms of number of individuals, of haddock discarded in the North Sea may exceed the number landed and similarly the number of hake discarded in the Bay of Biscay/Celtic Sea may exceed the number landed. (OECD 1997b)

The emphasis in the work cited above is on the discarding of specimens of main commercial species caught in the North Sea. A study of discards of fish with very little or no current commercial value has been undertaken on behalf of the Commission of the European Community (Jensen et al 1994). This study concentrated on the discards in the Scottish and Danish fleets operating in the North Sea and specifically excluded discards of main commercial species such as cod, haddock, plaice, whiting, saithe, sole, herring, sprat and mackerel. The main species which were found to be discarded were as in Table 5 below. In addition significant discards were found of Norway pout, lesser spotted dogfish, horse mackerel, witch and cuckoo ray. Of the species studied the Danish fleet was estimated to discard 4,237 tons per year, the Scottish Nephrops fleet 2,820 tons per year and the rest of the Scottish fleet 12,757 tons/year.

Table 5 - The five highest discards of non commercial species in the Danish and Scottish North Sea fleet

Species Country

Tons discarded/year

Common dab Denmark

1,932

  Scotland

5,277

Grey gurnard Denmark

627

  Scotland

2,765

Starry ray Denmark

1,366

  Scotland

2,153

Lemon sole Denmark

14

  Scotland

1,482

Long rough dab Denmark

65

  Scotland

807

8.4 South East Atlantic

In the Southern Atlantic off the Angolan, Namibian and South African coasts Japp (1996) estimated the amounts of discards for various species as in Table 6 below. Japp reports small quantities of other discards caught by other types of gear such as some snoek from the handline fishery and hake, shark and kingklip from the long line fisheries of the area. As can be seen from Table 6 however there appear to be substantial quantities of discards from trawl fisheries of various types. This is one of the few publications where discard estimates of particular species are made against particular types of fishing gear, rather than a blanket figure being given for all species discarded against a gear or of a figure for one species being discarded over a number of gears.

Table 6 - Discards in the South East Atlantic

Species

Total landed

Total Discarded

Bottom Trawl for Hake
Hake

256,098

47,378

Kingklip

6,252

4,509

Ribbon

4,957

2,404

Mackerel

1,918

384

Angel

1,769

0

Jacopever

1,109

979

Dory

1,079

1,061

Red mullet

102

73

Octopus

34

21

Red squid

19

9

Trash/Fish meal

2,483

0

Monk

9,320

2,017

Snoek

6,991

0

Squid

355

148

St Joseph & shark

1,128

1,794

Bottom Trawl Monk fish
Monk

6,476

1,230

Bottom Trawl for Shrimp
Crustacea

1,914

280

Cephalopods

43

30

Finfish

71

50

Bottom Trawl for Sole/Hake
Soles

1,273

255

Skates and rays

1,829

1,666

Kob

126

64

Panga

3,311

2,997

Silver

23

21

Gurnard

516

475

W. Stumpnose

51

40

Linef (Tr)

65

36

Mid water Trawl Horse mackerel
Horse mackerel

312,874

257,903

Trawl finfish

3,632

672

Dentex & alfon

2,974

493

Japp reports that in Natal province of South Africa in spite of increased utilisation of bycatch and better selectivity in trawling there are still regular reports of dumping particularly when markets require specific sizes of fish.

8.5 Japan

Estimations of discards in some Japanese fisheries are given by Matsuoka (1996) who taking the best available evidence tries to assess the quantities of the various species discarded in the many and various fisheries in Japan. He concludes that the major discards problems are associated with the small trawl and boat seine fisheries in coastal waters of Japan. There are also major discards of fish associated with the distant water long line tuna fleet. Quantified discards of particular species are given as in Table 7.

Table 7 - Partial estimates of discards of some major species in Japan (1994)

Products W/W Discards
Species and sector (MT) disc. ratio (MT)
Walleye pollock (distant water trawl in N Pacific)

121,068

0.17

20,582

Walleye pollock (off-shore trawl)

149,959

0.175

26,243

Flatfishes (small trawl)

166,584

0.054

8,996

However the quantification of the amount of discards is less certain in most cases and Matsuoka is only able in most instances to indicate in more general terms that fish of particular groups are discarded during various types in fishing operation. This information is summarised in the Table 8 below.

Table 8 - Summary of major discards from the various fishery types in Japan

Type of fishery Target Specie(s) Discarded Comments
Commercial Fisheries
Surround nets Skipjack and tunas Shark, trigger fish, filefish, dolphin fish, trevally, jacks When setting on floating objects
Longline Tunas Sharks blue, Walbeem’s sharpnose, oceanic whitetip, others  
Trawls Distant water North Pacific Walleye pollock Sculpins, snailfish, sharks, stingrays.

Walleye pollock, thornyheads, rockfish and pacific cod

Small individuals of target spp
Trawl pelagic Bering Sea Walleye pollock Smooth lump sucker  
Trawl East China Sea   Hairtail, flatfishes, tongue soles, plus non-commercial spp such as starfish  
Trawl off shore- Honshu Island Walleye pollock Walleye pollock Undersize specimens
Trawl off shore Pacific Coast of Central Japan Many species landed Small/soft shell/female Tanner crabs  
Small Scale Fisheries
Set nets for mixed species   Juveniles of commercial species such as: grunt, striped beakperch, barracuda, red bulleye, anchovy, leatherjacket, sardines  
    Non-commercial - 28%

Other organisms - 30%

 
Prawn trawlers Deep water prawns Grenadiers, greeneye, conger eel Non-commercial finfish
    Marbled sole, finespotted flounder, dogfish, cardinalfish, ponyfish, gobies, dragonet  
    Cloudy dogfish, cardinalfish  
Boat seines Kyushu Island   Red sea bream, olive flounder From stock enhancement programmes
Bottom gillnets Mantis shrimp Brown sole, long snout flounder, pointed flounder Discarded because of size regulations
Trammel nets Cuttlefish Olive flounder From stock enhancement programmes
Longlines Pacific Coast of Central Japan Saucod, seaperch, beardfish, hakeling Shark, puffers, stingrays, black escolar, hagfish  
Trap fishery Sea of Japan Tanner crab Female and small specimens released.  

8.6 Falkland/Malvinas Islands

The fishery around the Falkland/Malvinas Islands in the South West Atlantic which started commercially in 1987 has been regulated and controlled on the basis of real time commercial and scientific data since soon after it’s inception. (Nolan and Yau 1996). This has involved collection of data from commercial logbooks, scientific onboard observation and research cruise information. The entering of information on discards into logbooks is mandatory under the licences issued for fishing by the Falkland Islands Government, however it has been found that the information entered into the logbooks is often incomplete and unreliable. The log book records have been compared with those recorded by onboard observers and show that vessels without observers on board reported only 24% of the total bycatch recorded by observers over the same period.

The long line fishery for Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) catches a high proportion by weight of the target species which is discarded because it suffers from what is known as "jellied meat". Nolan and Yau report that over 56% by weight of the toothfish are discarded because of this condition but that this represents less than 14% of the number of fish caught. This suggests that the condition is associated with larger and older fish and that it may become less of a problem as the larger fish become fished out in this relatively young fishery. The jellied meat condition is associated with myxosporidean protozoan parasites in other species of fish although as far as is known no specific identification of the cause in Dissostichus eleginoides has been made.

In the pelagic trawl fishery for southern blue whiting (Micromesistius australis australis) catches of non-target fish are rare and it is reckoned that less than 0.4% of the catch is generally discarded. However the southern blue whiting itself is often heavily infested with Kudua alliaria (a myxosporidean protozoan parasite) and these fish along with those too small for processing will make up the bulk of discards.

Table 9 summarises the major species in the discards by type of fishery as reported by Nolan and Yau. Overall the most commonly reported species in the bycatch/discards are notothen, blue whiting, and hoki. Other species which are incidentally caught but which are not recorded as discards because they are probably consumed on board the vessels include, kingclip, common and Patagonian hake. The discarding of undersized specimens of commercial species are also only occasionally recorded in log books.

Table 9 - Major discard species in Falkland/Malvinas Islands fisheries

Fishery - Species Common Name  
Loligo - Bottom Trawl
Patagonotothen ramsayi Notothen  
Micromesistius australis australis Blue whiting  
Loligo gahi Squid  
Macruronus magellanicus Hoki/Patagonian grenadier  
Ilex - Bottom Trawl
Macruronus magellanicus Hoki/Patagonian grenadier  
Stromateus brasiliensis Pomfret  
Squalus acanthia Spiny dogfish  
Patagonotothen ramsayi Notothen  
  Rays spp  
Finfish - Trawl
Micromesistius australis australis Blue whiting  
Coelorhyncus fasciatus    
Patagonotothen ramsayi Notothen  
Macrourus holotrachys Bigeye grenadier  
Macrourus carinatus    
Macruronus magellanicus Hoki/Patagonian grenadier  
Ilex - Jigging
Moroteuthis ingens Squid (Sea arrow)  
Martialia hyadesi Black squid  
Toothfish - Longline
Dissostichus eleginoides Patagonian toothfish <56% of target species discarded because of "jellied meat" condition.
Macrourus holotrachys Bigeye grenadier  
Antimora rostrata Blue antimora (Blue hake)  
Bathyraja papilionifera Skate  
Rajidae - Fishery
Patagonotothen ramsayi Notothen  
Raja doellojuradol    
Dissostichus eleginoides Patagonian toothfish  
Echinodermata Sea urchins  
Blue Whiting - Fishery
Micromesistius australis australis Blue whiting Discarded because of parasites
Lampris immaculatus Southern opah  
Lamna nasus Porbeagle shark  

8.7 Western Pacific Ocean tuna fishery

The western and central Pacific Ocean represents the highest concentration of tuna fishing in the world. The statistical area covered by the South Pacific Commission produced an estimated catch of 948,863 tons in 1995. The major species of tuna caught are dominated by skipjack (70%), yellowfin (23%), bigeye (4%) and albacore (3%). The majority of the catch is harvested using purse seines (80%), longline harvesting 12% and pole and line just 8%. There are also small commercial fisheries utilising handlines and trolls for tuna. Bailey et al (1996) review the literature holdings of the South Pacific Commission concerning bycatch and discards in the tuna fisheries and it from this document that the information that follows is extracted.

8.7.1 Purse seines

Purse seine catches can be divided into a number of categories dependent on whether the set was made on a school of fish associated with an object or not. It appears that this association has an affect on the amount of non-tuna (bycatch) species caught at the same time.

Logbook data suggests that 50% of purse seine catches are made on schools not associated with floating objects whereas others are associated with floating logs (34%), man-made fish aggregating devices - FADs (5%) and a small number (1%) with animals. The non-associated school sets tend to produce a lower incidence of non-target species in terms of numbers, weight and the variety of species than those associated with floating objects. It is suggested that un-associated sets produce between 0.35 and 0.77% bycatch whereas associated sets produce 3.0 to 7.3% bycatch. The mix of species are also different depending on the type of set.

Un-associated sets commonly produce ocean anchovy (Stolephorus punctifer) bycatch with smaller numbers of shark, scombrids, billfish and other species.

Whereas associated schools have a higher incidence of bycatch and a larger number of species as shown in Table 10

Table 10 - Species found as bycatch in purse seine catches associated with floating objects

Common in large numbers
Amberjack (Seriola rivoliana)
Mackerel scad (Decapterus macrarellus)
Rainbow runner (Elagatis bipinnulata)
Drummer (Kyphosus cinerascens)
Mahimahi (Coryphaena hippurus)
Ocean triggerfish (Canthidermis maculatus)
Common in moderate numbers
Silky shark (Carcharhinus falciformis)
Wahoo (Acanthocybium solandri)
Bigeye trevally (Caranx sexfasciatus)
Filefish (Aluterus monocerus)
Man-o-war fish (Psenes cyanophrys)
Sergeant major (Abudefduf saxatilis)

With schools associated with logs the purse seines can harvest around 1 tonne of non-target fish per set (range 0.5 to 5.0 tonnes) of which a large portion may be discarded. It has been found, however, that rainbow runner and trigger fish may survive the discarding process and thus are generally released alive. Some mahimahi and wahoo may be retained for eating by crew. Generally, schools attracted to FADs will have the same species composition as the log sets but possibly in larger quantities. Sets on schools alone can include sharks such as silky and oceanic white tip and marlins (blue and black).

8. 7 .2 Long lines

Non-tuna bycatch in tuna longlines can include billfish, blue shark, oceanic white tip shark, Carcharinus spp and turtles. However, these species are thought to have high survival rates and therefore may not be a particular problem. When skipjack are caught these may be discarded. There may be irregular and unpredictable discards of target tuna species because they are too small or damaged.

8.7.3 Pole and line

Pole and line fisheries can produce bycatch of kawakawa (little tuna), frigate mackerel, mahimahi and rainbow runner. However the fishery uses live bait so if bycatch gets too high the vessel will stop fishing or move to other grounds to save wasting the bait. With the use of barbless hooks and flick off practices the survival rates for accidentally caught fish are thought to be high. Unsalable fish may also be taken home by the crew and in Fiji has been given to coastal communities to compensate for bait fishing access. (FAO 1997).

8.7.4 Trolling

When trolling the main targets are juvenile albacore 90 cm long. The bycatch may include sharks, scombrids, billfish, other tunas and skipjack most of which is discarded. Yellowfin may be retained if caught whilst heading for port. Some of the bycatch may be kept for crew consumption. Albacore may be lost during hauling or discarded because it is too small for canning.

8.7.5 Driftnets

The incidental catch of dolphin in tuna driftnets was a major concern and resulted in the banning of their use in the Western Central Pacific and in other parts of the world and was instrumental in brining the question of capture of unwanted marine life by fishing fleets to world attention.

8.7.6 Handlines

The small tuna handline fishery has low bycatches mostly of shark, which are released alive.

8.8 South Pacific artisanal/subsistence fisheries

In the artisanal and subsistence fisheries of the South Pacific islands very little of the catch is not utilised. The exception are fish for which there are taboos such as remoras and shark in certain islands. The known possibility of ciguatera poisons in some fish may lead to discarding of these fish. (FAO 1997)

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