While narrowing in on our project scope, we were trying to determine the gear type should we specifically design for, and / or test with. We learned from @Oluwatobi Oyinlola ’s interview with a fisher that they primarily use passive gear.
When comparing two types of passive gear: traps & pots and longlines, they are diametrically opposed on value vs quantity of landings.
This makes for a dilemma in choosing a gear type as a prime candidate for testing and designing! Read on for more information, and gear distance specifications.
In our meeting last week, @Giovanni shared some thoughts towards how to go about deciding: whatever gets us closer to testing a solution the fastest. Sometimes this can mean starting with a high-end solution to appeal to that market, then spreading it out to the more challenging areas.
There is also the option that we could try to make a generic solution across the different gear.
Research
Here is a data sample from the Canada Department of Fisheries & Oceans.
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Seafisheries landed value by province, 2018
All Groundfish (eg, halibut and cod) total = 410,344
Lobster total = 1,419,651
Crab total = 748,183
Lobster and crab have the greatest value
[source (Accessed July 7)]
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Seafisheries landed quantity by province, 2018
All Groundfish total = 228,239
Lobster total = 97,381
Crab total = 67,284
Groundfish has the greater quantity
[source (Accessed July 7)]
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Looking at data from the high seas (also known as international waters) shows the vast usage of longlines as well:
[source (Accessed July 7)]
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The most common gear reported to the Global Ghost Gear Initiative are nets, and Ghost Nets Australia has also found the majority of gear to be nets. [source: GNA Annual Report 2012 (Accessed July 12)]
[source (Accessed July 12)]
Gear Distances
Traps & pots
Depending on the type of vessel used, there are a variety of traps & pots configurations. Here is a sampling of a few - minimum, medium, and maximum. The diagrams are from Gulf of Maine’s Lobster Gear Configurations [source (Accessed July 12)], however I replaced the Fathom unit scale with metres.
[source (Accessed July 12)]
[source (Accessed July 12)]
[source (Accessed July 12)]
For general interest, a toggle is “a small float, generally less than 5 inches in diameter, deployed on a short gangion off the buoy line to prevent gear from getting snagged on the bottom” [source (Accessed July 12)]
Longlines
[source (Accessed July 12)]
[source (Accessed July 12)]
To Be Continued…
We haven’t decided yet. As we gather more information from fishers and our stakeholder, it will help the choice. Stay tuned!
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