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Ghost fishing in the pot fishery for blue swimmer crabs Portunus pelagicus in Queensland,Australia
Authors:Matthew J Campbell  Wayne D Sumpton
Institution:1. Korea Marine Litter Institute, Our Sea of East Asia Network, #717, 23-96 Jukrim 4-ro, Gwando, Tongyeong, Gyeongnam 53013, Republic of Korea;2. Department of Oceanography, Republic of Korea Naval Academy, Post Box 88-1, Jungwon-ro, Changwon, Gyeongnam 51704, Republic of Korea
Abstract:Blue swimmer crabs (Portunus pelagicus) are an economically important crab caught in baited traps throughout the Indo-west Pacific and Mediterranean. In Australia they are traditionally caught using rigid wire traps (≈pots) but there has been a recent increase in the use of collapsible pots constructed from polyethylene trawl mesh. Two experiments were conducted in Moreton Bay, Queensland, to determine the ghost fishing potential of lost crab pots on both target and bycatch species and to evaluate the differences between traditional and contemporary pot designs. A lost contemporary, collapsible trawl mesh pot will catch between 3 and 223 P. pelagicus per year after the bait has been exhausted, while a traditional wire mesh pot would catch 11–74 crabs per year. As most fishers now use the collapsible trawl mesh pots, ghost fishing mortality could be as high as 111,811–670,866 crabs per year. Bycatch retention was also higher in contemporary designs. Periods of strong winds appeared to increase the ghost fishing potential of lost pots. The use of escape gaps, larger mesh sizes and construction options that allow for the deterioration of entrance funnels to minimise ghost fishing are recommended to reduce environmental impacts.
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