
Ayana Johnson in Curaçao. Photo: NSF
Research Reveals Fish Trap Escape Gaps
Boost
Coral Reef Fishery Sustainability
Results of Scripps graduate student’s study
could benefit fishermen as well as conservation efforts
Scripps Institution of
Oceanography/University of California, San Diego
By making a stunningly simple alteration to fishing gear
used extensively in the Caribbean and tropical waters around the world, the
research of a Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego graduate
student could have monumental implications for the sustainability of coral reef
fishing practices.
As described in a research paper published in the
September 29 issue ofMarine Ecology
Progress Series, Scripps student Ayana Johnson worked in the southern
Caribbean island of Curaçao. designing and
testing small escape gaps in coral reef fish traps. The openings were small
enough to keep large, high-market value fish within the confines of the traps,
but led to a dramatic reduction in bycatch, the smaller fish caught
incidentally that have little or no economic value.

Escape gaps could be
used to retrofit traps used in coral reef fisheries around the world,” said
Johnson. “I’m excited by the possibility of this idea being used elsewhere
because of its potential as a low-tech, low-cost, yet highly effective tool.”
Johnson, who has been discussing
the possibility of implementing escape gap modification with coral reef fishery
contacts elsewhere in the Caribbean as well as Africa, said the idea of escape
gaps in coral reef traps is not new, but her research in Curaçao was the first
scientific test implemented on a large scale that considered both the
ecological and economic implications of requiring escape gap use.
Johnson deployed a
total of 24 traps at three shallow reef sites off Curaçao. She compared traditional
traps with no alterations to traps modified with escape gaps of varying sizes.
The study demonstrated that traps with escape gaps—rectangular openings made of
rebar woven into the mesh netting of the traps—of both short and tall heights
caught significantly less bycatch because narrow-bodied species and juvenile
fish managed to swim free.
it's a simple idea that could have a big impact on reef fish conservation, without impacting
fishermen’s incomes,” said Johnson, a Ph.D. student in the Scripps Center for
Marine Biodiversity and Conservation.
Escape gaps could hold
several important ecological and economic benefits, according to Johnson’s
paper, including healthier reefs as a result of more fish available to keep
destructive algae growth in check; a reduced number of juvenile fish caught,
leading to a larger number of reproductively mature fish and an overall
healthier fish population; and additional tourist interest as a result of
increased species diversity, a key attraction for recreational divers.
“Escape
gaps have great potential to benefit both fishermen and conservation, and requiring
escape gaps in all reef environments where traps are used would represent an
important step towards sustainable management,” Johnson wrote in the paper.
Mario C. Aguilera
November 1, 2010
|