THE EFFECTIVENESS OF FISH AND SHRIMP TRAWLS FOR SAMPLING FISH COMMUNITIES IN TROPICAL AUSTRALIA

Citation
Tj. Wassenberg et al., THE EFFECTIVENESS OF FISH AND SHRIMP TRAWLS FOR SAMPLING FISH COMMUNITIES IN TROPICAL AUSTRALIA, Fisheries research, 30(3), 1997, pp. 241-251
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Fisheries
Journal title
ISSN journal
01657836
Volume
30
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
241 - 251
Database
ISI
SICI code
0165-7836(1997)30:3<241:TEOFAS>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Catches of fish in a Frank and Bryce fish trawl during the day and in a Florida Flyer shrimp trawl at night were compared over 2 years (1992 , 1993). The effectiveness of a Frank and Bryce demersal trawl as a sa mpling tool for demersal fish communities was assessed from 122 statio ns in the far northern section of the Great Barrier Reef. Day-time and night-time catches of the Frank and Bryce net were compared to identi fy diurnal and nocturnal species. Of a total of 259 species caught, 13 8 were caught both during the day and at night. An analysis of varianc e was used to identify species that were caught exclusively or in grea ter biomass during the day or night; 17 species (mainly small apogonid s and mullids) were significantly nocturnal and one (a leiognathid) wa s significantly diurnal. The overall catch rate of the fish trawl duri ng the day was 395.8 kg h(-1) (s.e. 141.3) and that of the shrimp traw l at night was 28.0 kg h(-1) (s.e, 1.7). A total of 340 species was ca ught by both types of net-the fish trawler caught 236 species, the shr imp trawler 243, and 141 were common to both trawl types. An analysis of variance was used to help identify species that were caught in grea ter biomass by either trawl. Fifty-eight fish species each had a great er biomass in the fish trawl than in the shrimp trawls, for 60 species it was the reverse and for 32 species there was no difference, The fi sh caught only by the fish trawl were mainly pelagic species (mackerel s, carangids) or specimens of large species (lutjanids, sharks and ray s), while the fish caught only by the shrimp trawl were small benthic species (apogonids, platycephalids, scorpaenids and flatfish). Over 80 % of the fish caught by both nets were small (< 30 cm SL). The length- frequency distributions of only seven species differed significantly b etween fish and shrimp trawl catches, with the shrimp trawl generally catching the smaller component. No large commercially or recreationall y important species of reef fish were caught by the shrimp trawl. The results of this study indicate that each type of trawl net will catch different species and, where they catch the same species, they catch d ifferent numbers, sizes and weights. Neither gear type can be used on its own for an adequate description of the fish community. (C) 1997 El sevier Science B.V.