Out with the old and in with the new: T90 codends improve size selectivity in the canadian redfish (sebastes mentella) trawl fishery

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Abstract

The size selectivity of four codends were compared in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada, redfish fishery (Sebastes mentella), including the regulated diamond mesh codend with a mesh opening of 90 mm (T0) and three experimental codends of different mesh openings (90, 100, 110 mm) in which the netting is turned 90° to the direction of tow (T90). Results for the regulated codend showed that there was little size selection, catching greater than 97% of redfish over all of the length classes observed. Considering the fished population, the smallest T90 codend would catch 30% fewer redfish under the minimum landing size (MLS) of 22 cm compared with the T0 codend, but would also lose 16% of catch above 22 cm. The T90 codend with 100 mm mesh opening had the same size selectivity as the smallest T90 codend. The 110 mm T90 codend would catch 50% less redfish below MLS but lose 40% of redfish above MLS. Overall, results show that T90 codends improve size selectivity in which large proportions of undersized fish are successfully released.

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Cheng, Z., Winger, P. D., Bayse, S. M., Kebede, G. E., Delouche, H., Einarsson, H. A., … Walsh, S. J. (2020). Out with the old and in with the new: T90 codends improve size selectivity in the canadian redfish (sebastes mentella) trawl fishery. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 77(10), 1711–1720. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2020-0063

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