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Survival and Physiological Recovery after Capture by Hookline: The Case Study of the Blackspot Seabream (Pagellus bogaraveo)

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/26442

DOI: 10.3390/fishes6040064

ISSN: 2410-3888

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2022_045.pdf (1.589Mb)
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Author/s
Ruiz-Jarabo de la Rocha, Ignacio; Fernández-Castro, Miriam; Jerez Cepa, IsmaelAuthority UCA; Barragan-Mendez, Cristina; Pérez, Montse; Pérez, Evaristo; Gil, Juan; Canoura, Jesús; Farias, Carlos; Mancera Romero, Juan MiguelAuthority UCA; Sobrino, Ignacio
Date
2021-12
Department
Biología
Source
Fishes 2021, 6(4), 64
Abstract
Evaluating the survival of discarded species is gaining momentum after the new European Common Fisheries Policy (Article 15 of the European Regulation No. 1380/2013). This regulation introduced a discard ban, with an exemption for those species with demonstrated high survival rates after their capture and release. Candidate species should be evaluated for each fishing gear and geographical area. In this study, we assessed not only survival, but also physiological recovery rates of blackspot seabream (Pagellus bogaraveo) below commercial size captured with a hookline called "voracera" in the Strait of Gibraltar (SW Atlantic waters of Europe). Experiments onboard a commercial fishing vessel were paralleled with studies in controlled ground-based facilities, where the capture process was mimicked, and physiological recovery markers were described. Our results confirmed that hookline capture induced acute stress responses in the target species, such as changes in plasma cortisol, lactate, glucose, and osmolality. However, 90.6% of the blackspot seabreams below commercial size captured with this fishing gear managed to survive, and evidenced physiological recovery responses 5 h after capture, with complete homeostatic recovery occurring within the first 24 h. Based on this study, the European Commission approved an exemption from the discard (EU Commission Delegated Regulation 6794/2018). Thus, the robust methodology described herein can be an important tool to mitigate the problem of discards in Europe.
Subjects
capture-recapture; discards; fisheries policy; physiology; survival
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Atribución 4.0 Internacional
This work is under a Creative Commons License Atribución 4.0 Internacional

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