Primary tabs

Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Reports

Formal report series, containing results of research and monitoring carried out by Marine Scotland Science

License

UK Open Government Licence (OGL)

Other Access

The information on this page (the dataset metadata) is also available in these formats.

JSON RDF

via the DKAN API

Effects of Codend Mesh Size and Twine Number on Nephrops Selectivity. Report on FISA project 03/13

Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Vol 6 No 3

A set of trials were conducted in the West Coast to examine the selectivity of Nephrops (Nephrops norvegicus) with regards to codends with the following mesh size and construction: 80 mm diamond mesh codend of 4 mm single Brezline (PE) twine; 100 mm diamond mesh codend of 5 mm double Brezline (PE) twine; 120 mm diamond mesh codend of 5 mm double Brezline (PE) twine. The results can be summarised as follows: For Nephrops the catch rates of the 3 test gears differed significantly from each other. At a carapace length of 35 mm the 80 mm mesh showed 77% retention, the 100 mm codend showed 61% retention and the 120 mm codend showed 43% retention. For whiting (Merlangius merlangus) the catch rates of the 3 test gears differed significantly from each other with increasing selectivity as mesh size increased. For haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) the selectivity increased as mesh size increased however, that of the 80 mm and 100 mm codends did not differ significantly from each other.

doi: 
10.7489/1552-1
Citation: 
Drewery, J., Edridge, A., Kinghorn, M., Kynoch, R.J., Mair, J., O’Neill, F.G. and Summerbell. K. (2015) Effects of Codend Mesh Size and Twine Number on Nephrops Selectivity. Report on FISA project 03/13. Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Vol 6 No 3. Edinburgh: Scottish Government, 23pp.
FieldValue
Publisher
Modified
2020-01-07
Release Date
2015-04-13
Identifier
d1ca2d70-1fc1-4c39-959f-0bfc2acb1355
Spatial / Geographical Coverage Location
Scotland
Temporal Coverage
2014-06-30 to 2014-07-30
License
UK Open Government Licence (OGL)
Author
J Drewery
Data Dictionary

The twin trawl method was used to perform selectivity trails. This is where one net (termed the control) of what is normally a matched pair in a twin-rig setup fishes a small mesh codend which retains the total population of catch of all species. The other net (the test) differs from the control only in the feature(s) under examination. Here the features under examination are mesh size and number. Catches from the test are compared to catches from the control and expressed as a proportion retained of the total population. MFV Ocean Trust PD 787 was chartered for the purpose and the trials were undertaken during 11-23 July 2014 on commercial west coast Nephrops grounds. The target species for all hauls was Nephrops. Certain species of commercial whitefish were worked up as available but these were not targeted to the exclusion of Nephrops.

Contact Name
Marine Scotland Science
Contact Email
Public Access Level
Public