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Using Species Composition Data from a Trawl Survey to Determine Potential Bycatch of the Commercial Trawl Fishery for Horseshoe Crab Limulus polyphemus in the Middle Atlantic Bight
Author(s) -
Graham Larissa J.,
Murphy Brian R.,
Hata David
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
north american journal of fisheries management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.587
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1548-8675
pISSN - 0275-5947
DOI - 10.1577/m07-206.1
Subject(s) - bycatch , fishery , skate , horseshoe crab , biology , limulus , fishing , ecology , paleontology
The National Marine Fisheries Service has encouraged regional management councils to develop fisheries ecosystem plans that, among other things, identify the bycatch species within each fishery and describe each species' spatial and temporal distribution. Horseshoe crabs Limulus polyphemus have been harvested along the eastern coast of the USA since the 1800s; however, a fishery management plan was only recently created for this species, and bycatch in the horseshoe crab trawl fishery has not been quantified. We identified species likely to be caught as bycatch in the commercial fishery by using species composition data from a fishery‐independent horseshoe crab trawl survey conducted in 2005 and 2006. Seventy‐six taxa were caught, including 47 finfish species from 33 families. Skates (family Rajidae) comprised more than one‐half of the total biomass caught, and horseshoe crabs comprised one‐third of the total biomass. Catch per unit effort (kg/km towed) was greatest for little skate Leucoraja erinacea , winter skate Leucoraja ocellata , horseshoe crab, and clearnose skate Raja eglanteria . We also caught species that are currently on the World Conservation Union's Red List (e.g., Atlantic sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus ) and unmanaged within U.S. waters (e.g., cownose ray Rhinoptera bonasus and smooth dogfish Mustelus canis ). Nonmetric multidimensional scaling was used to cluster sites based on species abundance. The sites strongly clustered into two distinct groups, suggesting that species composition differs between northern and southern sites. Bottom water temperature was a significant factor in determining species composition, explaining almost 70% of the variation in species composition among sites. The results of this study provide managers with a better understanding of which nontarget populations may be affected by the horseshoe crab trawl fishery, a first step in understanding the broader ecosystem‐level effects of this fishery.

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