4.1 Article

Effect of bait and gear type on channel catfish catch and turtle bycatch in a reservoir

期刊

JOURNAL OF FRESHWATER ECOLOGY
卷 30, 期 3, 页码 407-415

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/02705060.2014.966165

关键词

turtle bycatch; channel catfish; experimental design; hoop nets; trotlines

资金

  1. Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation through Sport Fish Restoration Grant [F-81-R]
  2. Oklahoma State University through Sitlington Enriched Graduate Scholarship
  3. Oklahoma Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research (Oklahoma State University)
  4. Oklahoma Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research (Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation)
  5. Oklahoma Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research (U.S. Geological Survey)
  6. Oklahoma Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
  7. Oklahoma Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research (Wildlife Management Institute)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Hoop nets have become the preferred gear choice to sample channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus but the degree of bycatch can be high, especially due to the incidental capture of aquatic turtles. While exclusion and escapement devices have been developed and evaluated, few have examined bait choice as a method to reduce turtle bycatch. The use of ZoteTM soap has shown considerable promise to reduce bycatch of aquatic turtles when used with trotlines but its effectiveness in hoop nets has not been evaluated. We sought to determine the effectiveness of hoop nets baited with cheese bait or ZoteTM soap and trotlines baited with shad or ZoteTM soap as a way to sample channel catfish and prevent capture of aquatic turtles. We used a repeated-measures experimental design and treatment combinations were randomly assigned using a Latin-square arrangement. Eight sampling locations were systematically selected and then sampled with either hoop nets or trotlines using ZoteTM soap (both gears), waste cheese (hoop nets), or cut shad (trotlines). Catch rates did not statistically differ among the gear bait-type combinations. Size bias was evident with trotlines consistently capturing larger sized channel catfish compared to hoop nets. Results from a Monte Carlo bootstrapping procedure estimated the number of samples needed to reach predetermined levels of sampling precision to be lowest for trotlines baited with soap. Moreover, trotlines baited with soap caught no aquatic turtles, while hoop nets captured many turtles and had high mortality rates. We suggest that ZoteTM soap used in combination with multiple hook sizes on trotlines may be a viable alternative to sample channel catfish and reduce bycatch of aquatic turtles.

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