Longline hook selectivity for red tilefish Branchiostegus japonicus in the East China Sea

0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences 14. Life underwater
DOI: 10.1007/s12562-009-0115-z Publication Date: 2009-06-12T11:44:30Z
ABSTRACT
The catch of red tilefish by the Japanese longline fishery in the East China Sea has steeply declined during the last two decades, and resource management is clearly required. This study presents the size selectivity of hooks for red tilefish as a method to control first capture size, based on the results of longline fishing experiments using “Tainawa-bari” hooks of several sizes: Japanese nominal sizes J#10, J#11, J#12, J#13, J#14 and J#16. On the assumption of geometrical similarity in the combination of upper jaw length u and hook width g at a given retention probability, a single master curve s(R) = exp (−14.42 + 8.85R)/(1 + exp [−14.42 + 8.85R]) was estimated in terms of relative upper jaw length to hook width, R = u/g, using the SELECT method based on a multinomial distribution. The relative upper jaw length for 50% retention is 1.63, and the selection range is 0.25. Almost all fish over 300 mm in total length were retained by a hook of size J#12, but smaller fish with less commercial value were also caught. Moreover, J#10 hooks catch fish with total lengths of >250 mm efficiently. This indicates that J#10 and J#12 hooks that are currently used are too small to optimize yield per recruit and also for resource conservation.
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