Pacific halibut bycatch in the Alaskan groundfish fisheries : criteria for determining limits
Abstract
Most fisheries, marine or freshwater, commercial or recreational, catch other
species in addition to the desired, or target, species. The catch of these additional species
is termed incidental catch, or bycatch. Fishery bycatch is made up of a variety of
animals, from cetaceans to seabirds to unmarketable fishes. Economic and fishery
management considerations may cause the fisherman to keep the bycatch species for its
commercial value, or, conversely, may require the bycatch be returned to the sea.
In some fisheries, bycatch is retained because of its value in relation to the rest
of the catch. For example, the target species may comprise only a small part of the catch,
placing a reliance on the bycatch to provide a significant contribution to the overall
revenue generated. In tropical fisheries for shrimp, the catch of shrimp is usually 10
percent or less of the total, whereas the bycatch of finfish and other species, which are
large in size and commercially valuable, are the principle component of the catch
(Gulland 1983).
In many fisheries, bycatch is discarded due to economic or management reasons.
The lack of a market or suitable ex-vessel price may force discarding the bycatch. Such
was the case with the bycatch of white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) in the gillnet
and trap fishery for Columbia River salmon prior to commercial exploitation in the early
1880s (Bricklemeyer et al. 1989). In trawl fisheries, several species are caught in addition
to the target species, but only those with commercial value during open seasons may be
retained. Consequendy, most of the bycatch of other species is discarded. Saila (1983)
estimated the discards of all species in the world’s commercial marine fisheries to range
from 12 to 20 billion pounds (0.5 to almost 1 million metric tons) of sea life.
Description
Thesis(M.M.A.)--University of Washington, 1992
