Fishing techniques

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(Redirected from
Gathering seafood by hand
)
Major fishing techniques.
Wild fish catch by gear type, World. Among the major fishing techniques bottom trawling is a destructive one.

Fishing techniques are methods for catching fish. The term may also be applied to methods for catching other

molluscs (shellfish, squid, octopus) and edible marine invertebrates
.

developing countries
, and as a cultural heritage in other countries. Mostly, recreational fishers use angling methods and commercial fishers use netting methods.

There is an intricate link between various fishing techniques and knowledge about the fish and their behaviour including migration, foraging and habitat. The effective use of fishing techniques often depends on this additional knowledge.[1] Which techniques are appropriate is dictated mainly by the target species and by its habitat.[2]

Fishing techniques can be contrasted with fishing tackle. Fishing tackle refers to the physical equipment that is used when fishing, whereas fishing techniques refers to the manner in which the tackle is used when fishing.

Hand-gathering

Ama diver in Japan
southern USA

It is possible to harvest many sea foods with minimal equipment by using the hands. Gathering

modern Homo sapiens did not appear in Europe until around 50,000 years ago.[3][4]

  • Flounder tramping - Every August, the small Scottish village of Palnackie hosts the world flounder tramping championships where flounder are captured by stepping on them.
  • Noodling: Practiced in the United States, mostly in the South. The noodler places his hand inside a catfish hole. If all goes as planned, the catfish swims forward and latches onto the noodler's hand, and can then be dragged out of the hole, albeit with risk of injury to the noodler.[5]
  • free-diving to depths of thirty metres.[6] Today, free-diving recreational fishers catch lobster and abalone
    by hand.
  • Trout binning - Another method of taking trout. Rocks in a rocky stream are struck with a sledgehammer. The force of the blow stuns the fish.[7]
  • Trout tickling - In the British Isles, the practice of catching trout by hand is known as trout tickling; it is an art mentioned several times in the plays of Shakespeare.[8]

Spearfishing

Spearfishing is an ancient method of fishing conducted with an ordinary spear or a specialized variant such as a harpoon, trident, arrow or eel spear.[9][10] Some fishing spears use slings (or rubber loops) to propel the spear.

A Hupa man with his spear

Netting

Fishing nets are meshes usually formed by knotting a relatively thin thread. About 180 AD the Greek author Oppian wrote the Halieutica, a didactic poem about fishing. He described various means of fishing including the use of nets cast from boats, scoop nets held open by a hoop, and various traps "which work while their masters sleep".

Netting is the principal method of commercial fishing, though

trolling, dredging and traps
are also used.

A fisherman casting a net in Kerala, India
Oil painting of gillnetting, The salmon fisher by Eilif Peterssen
Pesca con el Sarambao (1847), a painting of salambáw fishermen in the Philippines
  • Cast nets - are round nets with small weights distributed around the edge. They are also called throw nets. The net is cast or thrown by hand in such a manner that it spreads out on the water and sinks. Fish are caught as the net is hauled back in.[12] This simple device has been in use, with various modifications, for thousands of years.
  • high seas
    is prohibited, but still occurs.
  • Ghost nets - are nets that have been lost at sea. They can be a menace to marine life for many years.
  • Gillnets
    - catch fish which try to pass through by snagging on the gill covers. Trapped, the fish can neither advance through the net nor retreat.
  • Haaf nets - mainly used in the Solway Firth forming part of the border between England and Scotland. Brought to Great Britain by the Vikings a thousand years ago, the technique involves the fisherman wading out to deep waters with a large rectangular net and waiting for salmon to swim into it. The fish is then scooped up by the raising of the net.
  • aquarium fish
    .
  • Lift nets - are a method of fishing using nets that are submerged to a certain depth and then lifted out of the water vertically. The nets can be flat or shaped like a bag, a rectangle, a pyramid, or a cone. Lift nets can be hand-operated, boat-operated, or shore-operated. They typically use bait or a light-source as a fish-attractor.[14]
    • Cheena vala - are shore operated lift nets from India.[15] Huge mechanical contrivances hold out horizontal nets with diameters of twenty metres or more. The nets are dipped into the water and raised again, but otherwise cannot be moved. Its name means "Chinese fishing net", though it originates from Southeast Asia
      .
  • purse seining fishing the net hangs vertically in the water by attaching weights along the bottom edge and floats along the top. Danish seining is a method which has some similarities with trawling
    . A simple and commonly used fishing technique is beach seining, where the seine net is operated from the shore.
  • Surrounding nets -
  • Tangle nets - also known as tooth nets, are similar to gillnets except they have a smaller mesh size designed to catch fish by the teeth or upper jaw bone instead of by the gills.[17]
  • trawlers
    . The activity of pulling the trawl through the water is called trawling.

Angling

Currier & Ives
, 1866
Fishermen using jiggerpoles for jigging from the Queenscliff pier

Angling is a method of fishing by means of an "angle" (fish hook). The hook is attached to a line, and is sometimes weighed down by a sinker so it sinks deeper in the water. This is the classic "hook, line and sinker" arrangement, used in angling since prehistoric times. The hook is usually dressed with lures or baits such as earthworm, doughball and bait fish.

Additional arrangements include the use of a

trolling
.

Line fishing

Line fishing is fishing with a fishing line, but not using rods. A fishing line is any cord made for fishing. Important parameters of a fishing line are its length, material, and weight (thicker, sturdier lines are more visible to fish). Factors that may determine what line an angler chooses for a given fishing environment include breaking strength, knot strength, UV resistance, castability, limpness, stretch, abrasion resistance, and visibility.

Modern fishing lines are usually made from artificial substances. The most common type is

monofilament, made of a single strand. There are also braided fishing lines and thermally fused superlines
.

  • hooks Droplines have a weight at the bottom and a float
    at the top. They are not usually as long as longlines and have fewer hooks.
  • groundfish and squid, but smaller pelagic fish
    can also be caught.
  • Pahila - is a traditional method of shoreline trolling in the Philippines. It uniquely uses baited hooks tied to a laterally flattened float called palyaw shaped like a small outrigger boat, a catamaran, or a fish. A long line is attached to the float. It is set unto the water's edge and dragged by someone running or walking along the beach. The combination of the water resistance and the diagonal pull forces the float outwards into deeper waters, like a kite. Once it reaches its maximum line length, it moves rapidly parallel to the person pulling it along the beach. It is pulled back to the shore intermittently to check for catches. Pahila literally means "pulled". It is also called subid-subid, sibid-sibid, paguyod, pahinas, hilada, or saliwsiw, among other names, in other Philippine languages.[18][19][20]
  • Jiggerpole - is a method of fishing for bass. It is built on using a cane pole with the line of at least 30lb. test, tied well down at the pole of about three quarters length in the typical cane pole manner, and then securely at the tip with about a foot to foot and a half length to drop in the water. Place a swivel on the end of the line. The trick is to linger the lure in a specific area going back and forth, maneuvering the tip of the cane pole in the water causing a noise to attract a bass to see a jig getting after a ripple of water the pole tip is causing.
  • Jigging - is the practice of fishing with a jig, a type of fishing lure. A jig consists of a lead sinker with a hook molded into it and usually covered by a soft body to attract fish. Jigs are intended to create a jerky, vertical motion, as opposed to spinnerbaits which move through the water horizontally.
  • pelagic species such as swordfish, tuna, halibut and sablefish
    .
  • Deadline [21]- is the practice of leaving the baited line without a rod (usually over night) and returning for the fish later.
Slab
External images
image icon Pelagic longline
image icon Dropline
image icon Trotline for catfish
  • Trotlining - a trotline is like a dropline, except that a dropline has a series of hooks suspended vertically in the water, while a trotline has a series of hooks suspended horizontally in the water. Trotlines can be physically set in many ways, such as tying each end to something fixed, and adjusting the set of the rest of the line with weights and floats. They are used for catching crabs or fish, such as catfish, particularly across rivers.

Rod fishing

Angling with a rod.
Extreme rock fishing off Muriwai Beach, New Zealand
An angler in his float tube plays a hooked pike.

Angling with

Floats may also be used, and can function as bite indicators
. The hook can be dressed with lures or baits.

Other angling

Trapping

Hà Tây, Vietnam
A typical wooden fish wheel
Lobster pots on the beach at Beer, Devon

Traps are culturally almost universal and seem to have been independently invented many times. There are essentially two types of trap, a permanent or semi-permanent structure placed in a river or tidal area and pot-traps that are baited to attract prey and periodically lifted.

  • Artisanal techniques
    • Dam fishing - An
      Baka pygmies. This involves the construction of a temporary dam resulting in a drop in the water levels downstream—allowing fish to be easily collected.[27]
  • Basket weir fish traps - were widely used in ancient times. They are shown in medieval illustrations and surviving examples have been found. Basket weirs are about 2 m long and comprise two wicker cones, one inside the other—easy to get into and hard to get out.[28]
  • Fishing weir - In medieval Europe, large fishing weir structures were constructed from wood posts and wattle fences. V-shaped structures in rivers could be as long as 60 metres and worked by directing fish towards fish traps or nets. Such fish traps were evidently controversial in medieval England. The Magna Carta includes a clause requiring that they be removed: "All fish-weirs shall be removed from the Thames, the Medway, and throughout the whole of England, except on the sea coast".[29]
  • Fish wheels - operate alongside streams, much as a water-powered mill wheel. A wheel complete with baskets and paddles is attached to a floating dock. The wheel rotates due to the current of the stream. The baskets on the wheel capture fish travelling upstream and transfer them into a holding tank. When the holding tank is full, the fish are removed.
  • Lobster traps - also called lobster pots, are traps used to catch lobsters. They resemble fish traps, yet are usually smaller and consist of several sections. Lobster traps are also used to catch other crustaceans, such as crabs and crayfish. They can be constructed in various shapes, but the design strategy is to make the entry into the trap much easier than exit. The pots are baited and lowered into the water and checked frequently. Historically lobster pots were constructed with wood or metal. Today most traps are made from checkered wire and mesh. It is common for the trap to be weighted down with bricks. A bait bag is hung in the middle of the trap. In theory the lobster walks up the mesh and then falls into the wire trap. Bait varies from captain to captain but it is common to use herring. In commercial lobstering five to ten of these traps will be connected with line. A buoy marks each end of the string of pots. Two buoys are important to make retrieval easier and so captains do not set their traps over each other. Each buoy is painted differently so the various captains can identify their traps.

Animals

Chinese man with fishing cormorant.
  • Cooperative human-dolphin fisheries date back to the
    Laguna, Santa Catarina, Brazil and a few other places in the world. In Laguna, men stand in shallow waters of the lagoon, or sit in canoes, forming a line, and waiting for the dolphins to appear. One or more resident dolphins drives fish towards the waiting fishermen. Then at a critical moment when the dolphins are close enough to the fishermen, one dolphin emerges from the water for an average duration of 1.4 seconds,[31] performing a unique sequence of movements not otherwise seen in the wild. This sequence serves as a signal to the fishermen to cast their throw nets. The dolphins then feed off the fish that manage to escape the nets.[32][33] In this unique form of fishing, the dolphins gain because the fish are disoriented and because the fish cannot escape to shallow waters where the larger dolphins cannot reach them. Likewise, studies show that fishermen casting their nets following the unique signal catch more fish than when fishing alone, without the involvement of the dolphins.[34]
  • Cormorant fishing - In China and Japan, the practice of cormorant fishing is thought to date back some 1300 years. Fishermen use the natural fish-hunting instincts of the cormorants to catch fish, but a metal ring placed round the bird's neck prevents large, valuable fish from being swallowed. The fish are instead collected by the fisherman.[35]
  • Frigatebirds fishing - The people of Nauru used trained frigatebirds to fish on reefs.
  • Portuguese Water Dogs - Dating from the 16th century in Portugal, Portuguese Water Dogs were used by fishermen to send messages between boats, to retrieve fish and articles from the water, and to guard the fishing boats. Labrador Retrievers have been used by fishermen to assist in bringing nets to shore; the dog would grab the floating corks on the ends of the nets and pull them to shore.
  • Remora fishing - The practice of tethering a remora, a sucking fish, to a fishing line and using the remora to capture sea turtles probably originated in the Indian Ocean. The earliest surviving records of the practice are Peter Martyr d'Anghera's 1511 accounts of the second voyage of Columbus to the New World (1494).[36] However, these accounts are probably apocryphal, and based on earlier, no longer extant accounts from the Indian Ocean region.

Other techniques

Scientists carrying out a population and species survey using electrofishing equipment
A laksegiljer in Osterfjord, Norway
  • basnigan
    are used.
  • species composition
    . When performed correctly, electrofishing results in no permanent harm to fish, which return to their natural state a few minutes after being stunned.
  • Fish aggregating devices - are man-made objects used to attract pelagic fish such as marlin, tuna and mahi-mahi (dolphin fish). They usually consist of buoys or floats tethered to the ocean floor with concrete blocks.
  • sea cucumbers from the seabed. They have the form of a scoop made of chain mesh and they are towed by a fishing boat. Dredging can be destructive to the seabed, because the marine life is unable to survive the weight of the dredge. It is extremely detrimental to coral beds since they take centuries to rebuild themselves. Unmonitored dredging can be compared to unmonitored forest clearing, where it can wipe out ecosystems. Nowadays, this method of fishing is often replaced by mariculture
    or by scuba diving.
  • Fish finders - are electronic sonar devices which indicate the presence of fish and fish schools. They are widely used by recreational fishermen. Commercially, they are used with other electronic locating and positioning devices.
  • Fishing light attractors - use lights attached (above or underwater) to some structure to attract fish and bait fish. Fishing light attractor are operated every night. After a while, fish discover the increased concentration of bait surrounding the light. Once located, the fish return regularly, and can be harvested.
  • Flossing - also called bottom bouncing. A method of angling usually used for salmon. It uses a hook and bait attached to a weighted bouncer dragged along the bottom of a stream or river.
  • Harvesting machines - have recently been developed for commercial fishing. Harvesting machines use pumps to pump fish out of the sea. Dredges have also been mechanized so that they directly transfer mollusks to the surface as are dredged.
  • handline fishing before World War II, but modern steel payaos use fish lights and fish location sonar to increase yields. While payaos fishing is sustainable on a small scale, the large scale, modern applications have been linked to adverse impacts on fish stocks
    .
  • Shrimp baiting - is a method used by recreational fisherman for of catching shrimp. It uses a cast net, bait and long poles. The poles are used to mark a specific location and then bait is thrown in the water near the pole. After several minutes the cast net is thrown as close to the bait as possible and shrimp are caught in the net. In the 1980s the sport became popular in the southeastern coastal states of the US.
  • Snagging, also known as snatching, jagging (in Australian English) or foul hooking, uses large, sharp, multi-pointed hooks tethered by a fishing line to pierce and grapple the fish externally. This is achieved by pulling the line out of the water very rapidly as soon as any movement is felt on the line, with the intention of impaling the hook point directly through the fish's skin and "clawing" firmly into the flesh like a gaff.[37][38]
  • Laksegiljer - small cabins standing on stilts where a fisherman sits. This method of fishing entails a net where the opening is controlled by a line tied to a rock. Under the cabin on the seabed is a white plank. When a salmon swims across the plank, the fisherman sees it and throws the rock into the water so the line closes the opening of the net, trapping the salmon. In Norway this method of fishing is banned, but in Osterfjord locals can obtain a special permit to use this method in order to maintain the old traditions.

Destructive techniques

Destructive fishing practices are practices that easily result in irreversible damage to aquatic habitats and ecosystems. Many fishing techniques can be destructive if used inappropriately, but some practices are particularly likely to result in irreversible damage. These practices are mostly, though not always, illegal. Where they are illegal, they are often inadequately enforced. Some examples are:

Blast fishing

Dynamite or blast fishing is done easily and cheaply with dynamite or homemade bombs made from locally available materials. Fish are killed by the shock from the blast and are then skimmed from the surface or collected from the bottom. The explosions indiscriminately kill large numbers of fish and other marine organisms in the vicinity and can damage or destroy the physical environment. Explosions are particularly harmful to coral reefs.[39] Blast fishing is also illegal in many waterways around the world.

Bottom trawling

groundfish) and semi-pelagic species such as cod, squid, shrimp, and rockfish
.

Bottom fishing has operated for over a century on heavily fished grounds such as the

Lophelia pertusa. This species is home to a diverse community of deep sea organisms, but is easily damaged by fishing gear. On 17 November 2004, the United Nations General Assembly urged nations to consider temporary bans on high seas bottom trawling.[41]

Cyanide fishing

Cyanide fishing is a method of collecting live fish mainly for use in aquariums, which involves spraying a sodium cyanide mixture into the desired fish's habitat in order to stun the fish. The practice hurts not only the target population, but also many other marine organisms, including coral and thus coral reefs.

Recent studies have shown that the combination of cyanide use and stress of post capture handling results in mortality of up to 75% of the organisms within less than 48 hours of capture. With such high mortality numbers, a greater number of fish must be caught in order to offset post catch death.

Muro-ami

Muro-ami is a destructive artisan fishing method employed on coral reefs in Southeast Asia. An encircling net is used with pounding devices, such as large stones fitted on ropes that are pounded onto the coral reefs. They can also consist of large heavy blocks of cement suspended above the sea by a crane fitted to the vessel. The pounding devices are repeatedly lowered into the area encircled by the net, smashing the coral into small fragments in order to scare the fish out of their coral refuges. The "crushing" effect on the coral heads has been described as having long-lasting and practically totally destructive effects.[42]

History

Ancient remains of

fish net have been found in ruins of the Stone Age. The people of the early civilization drew pictures of nets and fishing lines in their arts (Parker 2002). Early hooks were made from the upper bills of eagles
and from bones, shells, horns and plant thorns. Spears were tipped with the same materials, or sometimes with flints. Lines and nets were made from leaves, plant stalk and cocoon silk. Literature on the indigenous fishing practices is very scanty. Baines (1992) documented traditional fisheries in the Solomon Islands. Use of the herbal fish poisons in catching fishes from fresh water and sea documented from New Caledonia (Dahl 1985). John (1998) documented fishing techniques and overall life style of the Mukkuvar fishing Community of Kanyakumari district of Tamil Nadu, India. Tribal people using various plants for medicinal and various purposes (Rai et al. 2000; Singh et al. 1997; Lin 2005) extends the use notion for herbal fish stupefying plants. Use of the fish poisons is very old practice in the history of human kind. In 1212, King Frederick II prohibited the use of certain plant
Tarahumara
Indian (Gajdusek 1954).

Notes

  1. ^ Keegan, William F (1986) The Optimal Foraging Analysis of Horticultural Production American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 88, No. 1., pp. 92-107.
  2. ^ F.T.D. Website (2013) Fishing Tips and Techniques - Retrieved on 2013-24-07
  3. ^ Szabo
  4. ^ Szabo, Katherine Prehistoric Shellfish gathering.
  5. ^ Snopes Urban Legend Website on Noodling
  6. ^ Catelle, W. R. (1457). "Methods of Fishing". The Pearl: Its Story, Its Charm, and Its Value. Philadelphia & London: J. B. Lippincott Company. p. 171.
  7. ^ Trout binning in The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, Vol. 12, Issue 328, August 23, 1828, Project Gutenberg.
  8. ^ "Trout Tickling: Catching a Fish with Bare Hands". Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  9. ^ Image of an eel spear Archived 2023-04-09 at the Wayback Machine.
  10. ^ Spear fishing for eels Archived 2009-08-13 at the Wayback Machine.
  11. ^ Dunbar, Jeffery A (2001) Casting net Archived 2021-02-27 at the Wayback Machine NC Coastal fishing. Retrieved 25 August 2008.
  12. ^ Fishing Tools - Landing Nets Archived 2008-09-15 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "Lift Nets". Fisheries and Aquaculture Department. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Retrieved 1 July 2018.
  14. ^ "Shore operated stationary lift nets". Archived from the original on 2006-06-13. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  15. ^ Vicente C. Aldaba (1932). "Fishing methods in Manila Bay". The Philippine Journal of Science. 47 (3): 405–424.
  16. ^ Selective Fishing Methods Archived 2018-02-14 at the Wayback Machine Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. Retrieved 13 November 2011.
  17. ^ Umali, Agustin F. (1948). "Guide to the Classification of Fishing Gear in the Philippines". Fish and Wildlife Service Research Report (17).
  18. ^ "Super Effective Technique for Beach Fishing! Quick catch using Improvised Miniature boat!". Youtube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  19. ^ Kawamura, Gunzo; Bagarinao, Teodora (1980). "Fishing Methods and Gears in Panay Island,Philippines" (PDF). Memoirs of Faculty of Fisheries Kagoshima University. 29: 81–121.
  20. ^ "Allowed Angling Methods - Inland Fisheries Service". www.ifs.tas.gov.au. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
  21. .
  22. ^ J. Walker Network (2013). "pitch fishing". www.theoutdooractivity.com. Retrieved 2014-04-21.
  23. ^ KiteLines Fall 1977 (Vol. 1 No. 3) Articles on Kite Fishing Archived 2006-06-13 at the Wayback Machine.
  24. ^ Big Dropper Rigs
  25. ^ Musselman, Abe (26 May 2022). "Drone Fishers Are in the Hot Seat". Hakai Magazine. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  26. ^ Dam Fishing Archived 2012-07-20 at the Wayback Machine[failed verification] Fishing techniques of the Baka.
  27. ^ Shooting and Fishing the Trent Archived 2007-01-25 at the Wayback Machine, ancient fish traps.
  28. ^ The Text of Magna Carta, see paragraph 33.
  29. ^ M.B. Santos, R. Fernández, A. López, J.A. Martínez and G.J. Pierce (2007), Variability in the diet of bottlenose dolphin, Tursiops truncatus, in Galician waters, north-western Spain, 1990 – 2005 (.pdf), article retrieved April 3, 2007.
  30. ^ Dr. Moti Nissani. "The Dolphins of Laguna".
  31. ^ The Telegraph (2006), Brazil's sexiest secret, article retrieved March 11, 2007.
  32. ^ Dr. Moti Nissani (2007) Bottlenose Dolphins in Laguna Requesting a Throw Net (video). Supporting material for Dr. Nissani's presentation at the 2007 International Ethological Conference. Video retrieved February 13, 2008.
  33. hdl:10183/87930.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  34. ^ Cormorant fishing: history and technique Archived 2007-04-28 at the Wayback Machine.
  35. ^ De Orbe Novo, Volume 1, The Eight Decades of Peter Martyr D'Anghera, Project Gutenberg.
  36. ^ "Snagged". Fishbio. 28 November 2011. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  37. . Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  38. ^ Explosions In The Cretan Sea: The scourge of illegal fishing -- fishing with explosives.
  39. ^ "Beam trawling on the North Sea". Greenpeace. Archived from the original on 2008-12-10. Retrieved 2009-01-12.
  40. International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources
    17 November 2004. Retrieved 2009-05-09.

References

Further reading

External links