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Título

Seasonal variation in the survival of discarded Nephrops norvegicus in a NW Mediterranean bottom-trawl fishery

AutorGarcía-de-Vinuesa, Alfredo CSIC ORCID ; Breen, Michael; Benoît, Hugues P.; Maynou, Francesc CSIC ORCID ; Demestre, Montserrat CSIC ORCID
Palabras claveSurvival
Discards
Nephrops norvegicus
Vitality assessment
Landing obligation
Fecha de publicaciónoct-2020
EditorElsevier
CitaciónFisheries Research 230: 105671 (2020)
ResumenThe landing obligation in the revised European Union Common Fisheries Policy allows for exemptions to obligatory landing of the entire catch for species for which “high survival” of discards can be demonstrated. Nephrops norvegicus is an important target species in many fisheries across Europe in the Mediterranean Sea, NE Atlantic Ocean and North Sea. Historically, Mediterranean fisheries have had a high discard rate of small-sized Nephrops, and it is suspected that this unwanted component of the catch may have a high survival potential that is comparable to those of other EU fisheries, where survival rates of up to 0.56 have been demonstrated. However, to date, no investigations have confirmed a high discard survival rate for Nephrops in the Mediterranean Sea. Furthermore, the environmental, technical and biological characteristics that could affect Nephrops survival have been shown to be substantially different from those in the survival assessments conducted in the NE Atlantic and the North Sea. To address this knowledge gap, this study was conducted to determine the survival of Nephrops discarded from trawls in the Mediterranean Sea. The survival and vitality status of the discarded Nephrops removed from trawl catches were monitored onboard and for 14 days in the laboratory. The results showed seasonality in survival, with the highest survival rate in winter (0.74; CI: 0.7−0.78), lower survival in spring (0.36; CI: 0.31−0.41) and the lowest survival in summer (0.06; CI: 0.04−0.09). Survival was monitored to the asymptote in all cases, and season and vitality status were shown to have statistically significant relationships with survival
Descripción8 pages, 6 figures, 7 tables
Versión del editorhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2020.105671
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/217180
DOI10.1016/j.fishres.2020.105671
ISSN0165-7836
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