Activiteiten per jaar
Samenvatting
The Working Group on Electrical Trawling creates a platform for supra-national joint research projects on electro-trawling and scientific publications. The group also reviews all relevant studies on marine electrofishing and discusses the ongoing and upcoming research projects in the light of knowledge gaps. Research areas covered by the group included fishing tactics and dynamics, organisms and ecological impacts and selectivity of electro trawling. A study into the exploitation of local fishing grounds revealed that pulse trawlers and conventional tickler chain beam trawlers had similar tactics spending 10% of their tows searching for a fishing ground and spending 90% of their tows exploiting a fishing ground. In-situ field campaigns revealed a lower impact of pulse trawls on biogeochemical parameters compared to traditional beam trawl methods. Laboratory experiments found that while alternating or pulsed bipolar currents readily penetrated the sediment, biogeochemical effects appeared to be inhibited from occurring. The combined results concluded that the environmental impact of electricity from pulse trawls is relatively minor compared to the mechanical disturbances created from the same gears. Behavioral response thresholds for pulsed electric fields were determined in laboratory experiments for electroreceptive as well as non-electroreceptive fish species. Comparison of these thresholds to simulations of electric fields around commercial fishing gears suggest that electrical pulses are unlikely to substantially affect the investigated fish species outside the trawl track. A field study into direct mortality among fish and benthic organisms in the wake of pulse trawlers refuted claims that pulse trawling causes mass mortality among non-target species. A study into the selectivity of shrimp pulse trawling vs. traditional trawling concluded that that shrimp fishing using pulse gear does not result in higher amounts of undesired bycatches of small shrimp, fish and benthos when compared to the traditional shrimp beam trawl fisheries. The outline of a PhD project that started in 2021 into organism and ecological impacts of electrofishing for razor clams in Scottish shallow coastal habitats was presented and preliminary results were shared.
Originele taal-2 | English |
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Uitgeverij | International Council for the Exploration of the Sea |
Aantal pagina's | 16 |
Status | Published - 23-aug.-2022 |
Evenement | ICES Working Group on Electrical Trawling yearly meeting - Online Duur: 9-nov.-2021 → 10-nov.-2021 |
Publicatie series
Naam | ICES Scientific Reports |
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Uitgeverij | International Council for the Exploration of the Sea |
Nr. | 66 |
Volume | 4 |
Vingerafdruk
Duik in de onderzoeksthema's van 'Working Group on Electrical Trawling (WGELECTRA; outputs from 2021)'. Samen vormen ze een unieke vingerafdruk.Activiteiten
- 1 Academic presentation
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Behavioural response thresholds of marine fishes for pulsed electric fields
Boute, P. G. (Speaker), van Leeuwen, J. L. (Contributor) & Lankheet, M. J. (Contributor)
9-nov.-2021 → 10-nov.-2021Activiteit: Academic presentation › Academic