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Fishing techniques

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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 catching other aquatic animals such as molluscs (shellfish, squid, octopus) and edible marine invertebrates. Fishing is an ancient activity with a long history, and fish have surprising capabilities, from flying short distances to communicating MATIASc hrough sound and electrical pulses. Some fish are incredibly intelligent, using tools, and there are thousands of species, with some living for hundreds of years. Fishing techniques include hand-gathering, spearfishing, netting, angling and trapping. Recreational, commercial and artisanal fishers use different techniques, and also, sometimes, the same techniques. Recreational fishers fish for pleasure or sport, while commercial fishers fish for profit. Artisanal fishers use traditional, low-tech methods, for survival in 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

[edit]
Ama diver in Japan
Noodling for catfish in southern USA

It is possible to harvest many sea foods with minimal equipment by using the hands. Gathering seafood by hand can be as easy as picking shellfish or kelp up off the beach, or doing some digging for clams or crabs. The earliest evidence for shellfish gathering dates back to a 300,000-year-old site in France called Terra Amata. This is a hominid site as 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]
  • Pearl divers - traditionally harvested oysters by free-diving to depths of thirty metres.[6] Today, free-diving recreational fishers catch lobster and abalone by hand.
  • Trout binning - A 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

[edit]

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
  • Bowfishing - uses a bow and arrow to kill fish in shallow water from above.
  • Gigging - uses small trident type spears with long handles for gigging bullfrogs with a bright light at night, or for gigging suckers and other rough fish in shallow water. Gigging is popular in the American South and Midwest.
  • Hawaiian slings - have a sling separate from the spear, in the manner of an underwater bow and arrow.
  • Harpoons - Spearfishing with barbed poles was widespread in palaeolithic times.[11] Cosquer Cave in Southern France contains cave art over 16,000 years old, including drawings of seals which appear to have been harpooned.
  • Pike pole fishing and gaff fishing - Use handheld poles with sharp spikes to hit and impale fish.
  • Polespears - have a sling attached to the spear.
  • Modern spearguns - traditional spearfishing is restricted to shallow waters, but the development of the speargun has made the method much more efficient. With practice, divers are able to hold their breath for up to four minutes and sometimes longer. Of course, a diver with underwater breathing equipment can dive for much longer periods.
  • Tridents - are three-pronged spears. They are also called leisters or gigs. They are used for spear fishing and were formerly also a military weapon. They feature widely in early mythology and history.

Netting

[edit]

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 longlining, 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.
  • Drift nets - are nets which are not anchored. They are usually gillnets, and are commonly used in the coastal waters of many countries. Their use on the 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.
  • Hand nets - are small nets held open by a hoop. They have been used since antiquity. They are also called scoop nets, and are used for scooping up fish near the surface of the water. They may or may not have a handle–if they have a long handle they are called dip nets. When used by anglers to help land fish they are called landing nets.[13] Because hand netting is not destructive to fish, hand nets are used for tag and release, or capturing 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.
    • Salambaw - a type of traditional raft or barge-operated large lift nets from the Philippines. It utilizes a tall upright pole or a tower structure (timba) around 15 to 20 m (49 to 66 ft) in height. At the top of the pole are two large curving spars crossed with each other. A large square net is attached to the ends of these spars. The pole acts as a crane, it can be tilted to submerge the net using a weighted lever mechanism. The operator either pushes or pulls the lever, or climbs on it to bring it down with their body weight, thus raising the pole. A variation of the salambaw operated from large outrigger boats is known as basnigan.[16]
  • Seine nets - are large fishing nets that can be arranged in different ways. In 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]
  • Trawl nets - are large nets, conical in shape, designed to be towed in the sea or along the sea bottom. The trawl is pulled through the water by one or more boats, called trawlers. The activity of pulling the trawl through the water is called trawling.

Angling

[edit]
"Trolling for blue fish" lithograph by 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 fishing rod, which can be fitted with a reel, and functions as a delivery mechanism for casting the line. Other delivery methods for projecting the line include fishing kites and cannons, kontiki rafts and remote controlled devices. Floats can also be used to help set the line or function as bite indicators. The hook can be dressed with lures or bait. Angling is the principal method of sport fishing, but commercial fisheries also use angling methods involving multiple hooks, such as longlining or commercial trolling.

Line fishing

[edit]

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.

  • Droplining - a dropline consists of a long fishing line set vertically down into the water, with a series of baited 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.
  • Handlining - is fishing with a single fishing line, baited with lures or bait fish, which is held in the hands. Handlining can be done from boats or from the shore. It is used mainly to catch 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.
  • Longlining - is a commercial technique that uses a long heavy fishing line with a series of hundreds or even thousands of baited hooks hanging from the main line by means of branch lines called "snoods". Longlines are usually operated from specialised boats called longliners. They use a special winch to haul in the line, and can operate in deeper waters targeting 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
  • Slabbing: is a bass fishing technique, that involves repetitively lifting and dropping a flat lure, usually made of 1 to 2.5 oz of lead painted to look like a baitfish (or heavy slabs of metal), through a school of actively feeding fish that the angler has located on a fishfinder. Used on white and striped bass in the reservoirs of the southern USA.
  • Trolling - is fishing with one or more baited lines which are drawn through the water. This may be done by pulling the line behind a slow moving boat, or by slowly winding the line in when fishing from the land. Trolling is used to catch pelagic fish such as mackerel and kingfish.
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

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

Angling with fishing rods give more control of the fishing line, and allows the bait/lure to be launched much farther than hand-throwing can reach. The rod is usually fitted with a fishing reel which functions as a mechanism for storing, retrieving and paying out the line. Floats may also be used, and can function as bite indicators. The hook can be dressed with lures or baits.

  • Bank fishing - fishing from river banks and similar shorelines. Bank fishing is usually performed with a fishing rod and reel, although nets, traps, and spears can also be used. People who fish from a boat can sometimes access more areas in prime locations with greater ease than bank fishermen. However, many people do not own boats and find fishing from the bank has its own advantages. Bank fishing has its own requirements, and many things come into play for success, such as local knowledge, water depth, bank structure, location, time of day, and the type of bait and lures.
  • Casting - the act of throwing the fishing line out over the water using a flexible fishing rod. The usual technique is for the angler to quickly flick the rod from behind toward the water.[22] Casting is also a sport adjunct to fishing, much as shooting is to hunting. The sport is supervised by the International Casting Sport Federation, which sponsors tournaments and recognizes world records for accuracy and distance. Some variations of the technique exist, such as Surf fishing, the Reach cast, and Spey casting.
  • Float tubes - small doughnut-shaped boats with an underwater seat in the "hole". Float tubes are used for fly fishing and enable the angler to reach deeper water without splashing and disturbing stillwater fish.
  • Fly fishing - the use of artificial flies as lures. These are cast with specially constructed fly rods and fly lines. The fly line (today, almost always coated with plastic) is heavy enough cast in order to send the fly to the target. Artificial flies vary dramatically in size, weight and colour. Fly fishing is a distinct and ancient angling method, most renowned as a method for catching trout and salmon, but employed today for a wide variety of species including pike, bass, panfish, and carp, as well as marine species, such as redfish, snook, tarpon, bonefish and striped bass. There is a growing population of anglers whose aim is to catch as many different species as possible with the fly.
  • Tenkara fishing - Tenkara is a form of fly fishing that originated in Japan over 200 years ago. It was originally done with a bamboo pole between 12' and 20' with the line tied directly on the tip of the rod requiring no reel. Modern tenkara rods are usually made of graphite and are telescopic. Unlike western style fly fishing tenkara uses either a tapered line or a level line and forgoes the PVC coated fly fishing line. Typical target species include trout and char but most smaller freshwater species can be caught by this method.
  • Rock fishing - fishing from rocky outcrops into the sea. It is a popular pastime in Australia and New Zealand. It can be a dangerous pastime and claims many lives each year.
  • Pitch Fishing - also known as “pitching” or “pitch fishing,” is a technique designed to deliver the lure quietly and at a distance over the water. The lure will fly high and far out over the water, landing in a loud splash. Pitch fishing involves sending the lure out a lower angle, and thus making a smaller splash but still loud as noted in the previous sentence, which will hopefully not scare the fish.[23]
  • Surfcasting - fishing from a shoreline using a rod to cast into the surf. With few exceptions, surf fishing is done in saltwater, often from a beach. The basic idea of most surfcasting is to cast a bait or lure as far out into the water as is necessary to reach the target fish from the shore. This may or may not require long casting distances and muscular techniques. Basic surf fishing can be done with a surfcasting rod between seven and twelve feet long, with an extended butt section, equipped with an appropriate spinning or conventional casting reel. Dedicated surfcasters usually possess an array of terminal and other tackle, with rods and reels of different lengths and actions, and lures and baits of different weights and capabilities. Depending on fishing conditions and the fish they are targeting, such surfcasters tailor bait and terminal tackle to rod and reel and the size and species of the fish. Reels and other equipment need to be constructed so they resist the corrosive and abrasive effects of salt and sand.

Other angling

[edit]
  • Bottom fishing - is fishing the bottom of a body of water. In the United Kingdom it is called "ledgering". A common rig for fishing on the bottom is a weight tied to the end of the line, with a hook about an inch up line from the weight. The method can be used both with hand lines and rods. There are fishing rods specialized for bottom fishing, called "donkas". The weight is used to cast or throw the line an appropriate distance. Bottom fishing can be done both from boats and from the land. It targets groundfish such as sucker fish, bream, catfish, and crappie.
  • Ice fishing - is the practice of catching fish with lines and hooks through an opening in the ice on a frozen body of water. It is practised by hunter-gatherers such as the Inuit and by anglers in other cold or continental climates.
  • Kayak fishing - has a long history, and has gained popularity in recent times. Many of the techniques used are the same as those used on other fishing boats, apart from difference is in the set-up, how each piece of equipment is fitted to the kayak, and how each activity is carried out on such a small craft.
  • Kite fishing has long been used in China and by the people of New Guinea and other Pacific Islands. Kites can provide the fishermen access to waters that would otherwise be available only with boats. Similarly, for boat owners, kites provide a way to fish in areas where it is not safe to navigate such as shallows or coral reefs where fish may be plentiful. Kites can also be used for trolling a lure through the water. Suitable kites may be of very simple construction. Those of Tobi Island are a large leaf stiffened by the ribs of the fronds of the coconut palm. The fishing line may be made from coconut fibre and the lure made from spiders webs.[24] Modern kitefishing is popular in New Zealand, where large delta kites of synthetic materials are used to fish from beaches,[25] taking a line and hooks far out past the breakers. Kite fishing is also emerging in Melbourne where sled kites are becoming popular, both off beaches and off boats and in freshwater areas. The disabled community are increasingly using the kites for fishing as they allow mobility impaired people to cast the bait further out than they would otherwise be able to.
  • Kontiki Fishing - is the practice of using either a Kontiki sailing raft, or a modern motorised torpedo device to pull a longline (up to 25 hooks) from the beach up to two thousand metres offshore. This method of fishing is very popular on the surf beaches of New Zealand. The electric kontikis can also be used to pull surfcasting lines and baits offshore, before releasing them to fish. Modern electric kontikis use electric trolling motors, lithium batteries and GPS controlled autopilots, and electric winches are used to retrieve the line, hooks and kontiki back to shore.
  • Boat anglers - Fishing is usually done either from a boat or from a shoreline or river bank. When fishing from a boat, pretty much any fishing technique can be used, from nets to fish traps, but some form of angling is by far the most common. Compared to fishing from the land, fishing from a boat allows more access to different fishing grounds and different species of fish. Some tackle is specialised for boat anglers, such as sea rods.
  • Remote control fishing - Fishing can also be done using a remote controlled boat. This type of fishing is commonly referred to as RC fishing. The boat is usually one to three feet long and runs on a small DC battery. A radio transmitter controls the boat. The fisherman connects the fishing line/bait to the boat; drives it; navigating the water by manipulating the remote controller. The technique is growing in popularity.
  • Drone fishing - Rod fishing assisted by a drone, the drone can be a flying type or underwater type, it can be remote controlled by a human, computer, AI or a combination of the three simultaneously. The drone is used to scout for fish via camera, carry the hook to a far off location, cast the hook, reel in the fish and return. The degree of assistance is adjustable based on the model and configuration of drone used. This technique can be used to catch fish normally requiring a boat. Several US states, including Michigan and Oregon, have banned fishing with drones.[26]

Trapping

[edit]
Fishermen with traditional fish traps, 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 artisanal technique called dam fishing is used by the 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. 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

[edit]
Chinese man with fishing cormorant.
  • Cooperative human-dolphin fisheries date back to the ancient Roman author and natural philosopher Pliny the Elder.[30] A modern human-dolphin fishery still takes place in 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

[edit]
Scientists carrying out a population and species survey using electrofishing equipment
A laksegiljer in Osterfjord, Norway
  • Basnig - a traditional method of fishing in the Philippines that combines the use of bag nets and attracting fish with high-powered lamps. Specialized outrigger boats known as basnigan are used.
  • Electrofishing - is another recently developed technique, primarily used in freshwater by fisheries scientists. Electrofishing uses electricity to stun fish so they can be caught. It is commonly used in scientific surveys, sampling fish populations for abundance, density, and 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.
    • Lampuki nets - are an example of a traditional artisanal use of nets. Since Roman times, Maltese fishers have cut the larger, lower fronds from palm trees which they then weave into large flat rafts. The rafts are pulled out to sea by a luzzu, a small traditional fishing boat. In the middle of the day, lampuki fish (the Maltese name for mahi-mahi) school underneath the rafts, seeking the shade, and are caught by the fishers using large mesh nets.
  • Dredging - There are types of dredges used for collecting scallops, oysters or 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.
  • Payaos - a type of fish aggregating device used in Southeast Asia, particularly in the Philippines. Payaos were traditionally bamboo rafts for 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

[edit]

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

[edit]

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

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Bottom trawling is trawling (towing a trawl, which is a fishing net) along the sea floor. It is also referred to as "dragging". The scientific community divides bottom trawling into benthic trawling and demersal trawling. Benthic trawling is towing a net at the very bottom of the ocean and demersal trawling is towing a net just above the benthic zone. Bottom trawling targets both bottom-living fish (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 North Sea and Grand Banks. While overfishing has long been recognised as causing major ecological changes to the fish community on the Grand Banks, concern has been raised more recently about the damage which benthic trawling inflicts upon seabed communities.[40] A species of particular concern is the slow growing, deep water coral 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

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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

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Muro-ami is a destructive artisan fishing method employed on coral reefs in Southeast Asia, traditionally in Myanmar. 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

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Ancient remains of spears, hooks and 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 piscicides, and by the 15th century similar laws had been decreed in other European countries as well (Wilhelm 1974). All over the globe, indigenous people use various fish poisons to kill the fishes, documented in America (Jeremy 2002) and among Tarahumara Indian (Gajdusek 1954).

Notes

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Fishing techniques comprise the diverse mechanical, manual, and technological methods humans employ to capture fish and other aquatic organisms from bodies of water for subsistence, commercial, or recreational purposes. These methods rely on principles of attracting, herding, or directly ensnaring target species, leveraging environmental behaviors such as schooling or feeding instincts to maximize efficiency.[1] Fundamental categories include angling with hooks and lines, netting via encircling or dragging, trapping with pots or weirs, and dredging or trawling across substrates, each calibrated to water depth, current, and prey mobility.[2] Originating from prehistoric hand-capture and spearing, techniques have scaled to industrial levels with motorized vessels and sonar, enabling vast yields but also amplifying selective pressures on populations.[1] Empirical assessments reveal that gear selectivity influences species composition and age structures in catches, with passive methods like longlines targeting larger individuals while active trawling often harvests juveniles indiscriminately.[3] Commercial dominance by purse seines and trawls accounts for over 80% of global marine capture fisheries, sustaining billions in protein supply yet correlating with documented declines in biodiversity hotspots due to bycatch and habitat alteration.[4] Controversies arise from ecologically disruptive practices, such as bottom trawling's seafloor scouring, which empirical studies link to reduced benthic biomass, spurring quotas and gear modifications in managed fisheries.[3] Recreational variants, emphasizing catch-and-release, mitigate some impacts but still exert evolutionary pressures favoring bolder phenotypes.[5]

Manual and Primitive Techniques

Hand-Gathering

Hand-gathering refers to the direct capture of fish, shellfish, or other aquatic organisms using only the hands, typically in shallow waters, intertidal zones, or accessible underwater cavities, without mechanical aids or tools. This method targets species such as clams, crabs, abalone, and bottom-dwelling fish like catfish, relying on physical reach and tactile sensation. It is among the most ancient fishing practices, predating tools and enabling early human subsistence in coastal and riverine environments.[6][7] One common form is shoreline collection, where receding tides expose shellfish and crustaceans for manual picking or digging. For instance, clam diggers use hands to probe sand for buried bivalves like hard clams or steamers, sifting sediment to extract them while minimizing habitat disturbance. Regulations often require licenses; in Washington state, diggers over 12 must possess a shellfish license and adhere to daily limits, such as 40 pounds of razor clams per person during open seasons. Techniques involve identifying "shows"—protruding siphons or necks—and digging laterally to avoid damaging shells, with boiling water sometimes used post-harvest to purge sand.[8][9][10] In freshwater systems, noodling targets spawning catfish by inserting hands into underwater holes or undercut banks, where the fish instinctively bite and grip the intruder's arm, allowing extraction through wrestling. Documented among Native American tribes as early as 1775 by trader James Adair, this practice spread via Scottish immigrants employing similar "tickling" for salmon. Primarily used for flathead, channel, or blue catfish, it occurs in warm months when fish seek cavities for spawning; noodlers scout shallows, probe gently to locate the fish's mouth or gills, and surface with the catch amid risks of bites, scratches, or submersion hazards. Legal in select U.S. states including Oklahoma and Texas, it remains a regulated alternative method with size and bag limits to prevent overharvest.[11][12][13] Freediving hand-gathering, exemplified by Japan's ama divers, involves breath-hold descents to collect abalone, sea urchins, and seaweed from rocky seabeds. This tradition, practiced predominantly by women, entails dives up to two minutes at depths of 5-10 meters, using hands to pry shellfish from substrates and deposit them in floating baskets. Ama historically conducted two daily sessions of 30-40 minutes each, though numbers have declined due to aging practitioners and competition from mechanized fishing. Selective by nature, such methods allow targeted harvesting of legal-sized individuals, reducing bycatch compared to netting, but require skill to avoid decompression risks or marine hazards.[14][15] Overall, hand-gathering offers low environmental impact through direct selectivity but demands physical endurance and local knowledge, with sustainability enhanced by regulations limiting take to replenishable stocks.[16]

Spearfishing

Spearfishing entails the use of a spear, harpoon, or speargun to impale fish, primarily underwater via breath-hold diving or scuba apparatus, distinguishing it from surface-based methods by requiring direct submersion for targeting.[17] This selective harvesting method yields low bycatch compared to netting, as practitioners aim precisely at visible targets, though it demands proficiency in underwater navigation and species identification to mitigate refraction-induced aiming errors.[18] Archaeological records indicate its origins in the Upper Paleolithic era, with barbed spears employed for catfish capture in Central Africa and harpoon depictions in Indian and French sites dating to approximately 16,000 years ago.[19][20] Early implementations relied on sharpened wooden, bone, or stone poles thrust manually in shallow waters or rivers, as evidenced by Paleolithic cave art in sites like Cosquer Cave, France, portraying barbed harpoons for aquatic pursuit.[21] Ancient Egyptian Nile fisheries around 3000 BCE integrated spearfishing as a staple protein source, while Indigenous North American tribes, including the Hupa and Ojibwe, adapted multi-pronged spears for riverine and ice-based spearing over 2,000 years ago, sustaining communities through seasonal migrations.[22][23] Coastal groups like the Tlingit and Haida refined techniques with underwater traps alongside spears, emphasizing stealth to ambush prey in kelp forests or currents.[22] Hawaiian traditions similarly featured shore and submerged spearing, integral to cultural narratives of sustenance and skill.[24] Modern advancements include elastic-powered spearguns, pioneered by the French "Tarzan" model in 1947 by Georges Beuchat, enabling deeper pursuits beyond manual reach, though pneumatic variants using compressed air emerged later for reduced recoil.[25] Essential equipment comprises low-volume masks for unobstructed vision, long fins for propulsion, neoprene wetsuits for thermal protection and buoyancy, and dive knives for entanglement release, with weapons varying from lightweight pole spears for close-range throws to band-powered guns for distances up to 5 meters.[26] Techniques encompass stalking via silent glides to mimic predators, strumming speargun bands to lure curious fish, or ambushing in holes and reefs, predominantly via freediving to depths of 10-30 meters, as scuba-assisted spearfishing faces bans in regions like Australia and parts of Europe to curb overexploitation of trophy species.[27][28][29] Safety protocols emphasize the buddy system to counter risks like shallow water blackout from hyperventilation-induced hypoxia, which claims numerous freedivers annually, alongside boat propeller strikes and marine hazards such as lionfish spines or shark encounters post-kill.[18][30] Regulations vary globally, often prohibiting spearfishing in marine protected areas, during spawning seasons, or with artificial lights to preserve stocks; for instance, U.S. states mandate licenses and species quotas, while many jurisdictions restrict scuba use to promote sustainable, skill-dependent harvest over mechanical efficiency.[31][29] Practitioners must verify local statutes, as violations contribute to ecological strain despite spearfishing's inherent selectivity.[32]

Angling and Line Fishing

Hook and Line Basics

Hook and line fishing constitutes a primary angling technique wherein a baited or lure-equipped hook, affixed to a flexible line, is deployed into aquatic environments to attract and capture fish through oral engagement.[33] The method relies on the hook's pointed shank and barbed tip to penetrate the fish's mouth upon biting, enabling secure retention during retrieval without structural failure under load.[33] Archaeological evidence indicates origins tracing to Paleolithic eras, with shell and bone hooks recovered from sites suggesting use at least 16,000 years ago, predating more complex gear.[34] Early implementations featured rudimentary materials, such as linen lines and bronze hooks employed by ancient Egyptians along the Nile River circa 2000 BCE for targeting species like perch and catfish.[35] Contemporary hooks predominantly utilize high-carbon steel for tensile strength in freshwater applications or corrosion-resistant stainless steel alloys in marine settings, with designs varying by jaw shape—such as J-hooks for versatile bait presentation or circle hooks that rotate to self-set in the corner of the mouth, reducing gut hooking incidence.[36][37] Fishing lines function as the tensile conduit between hook and angler, historically evolving from natural fibers like silk or horsehair to synthetic variants including monofilament nylon, which provides inherent stretch for shock absorption and knot retention, and braided polyethylene for minimal stretch and high abrasion resistance.[38][35] Basic rigging entails securing the hook via knots such as the improved clinch—wrapping the line's tag end five to seven times through the hook eye before cinching—or the Palomar for enhanced strength retention up to 95% of line test.[39] Deployment principles emphasize positioning the bait at targeted depths using split-shot sinkers (typically 1/16 to 1/4 ounce lead or tungsten weights) to counter buoyancy and currents, often paired with bobbers for bite detection via visual cues.[40] Upon sensing resistance, the angler applies a swift upward rod motion to drive the hook point home, followed by steady reeling to land the fish while minimizing line slack that could enable escape.[41] This setup's simplicity facilitates still-water fishing from shores or boats, with efficacy dependent on factors like bait freshness, water clarity, and species-specific behaviors, such as bottom-feeders requiring weighted rigs versus surface strikers suited to unweighted presentations.[42]

Rod and Reel Angling

Rod and reel angling involves using a flexible rod to cast a baited hook or lure attached to a line wound on a reel, enabling anglers to present bait at varying distances and depths while providing mechanical advantage in retrieving and fighting fish. This method evolved from ancient hook-and-line practices, with evidence of rods dating to ancient Greek, Roman, and Macedonian civilizations around 800 BC, where simple wooden poles extended reach from boats or shores.[43] The reel, likely invented in China around AD 300-400 for silk reeling and adapted for fishing, remained rare in Western use until the 17th century, appearing primarily in artwork before practical adoption.[44] Modern rod and reel systems emerged in the 19th century, with bamboo rods commercialized in the 1800s and geared reels—allowing multiple spool revolutions per handle turn—attached beneath rods by the mid-1800s, improving line control and casting distance.[45] By the early 20th century, innovations like multiplying gears and anti-reverse mechanisms standardized the setup, transitioning from hand-line methods to powered retrieval for larger species.[46] Contemporary materials, such as graphite composites for rods and aluminum alloys for reels, reduce weight while enhancing sensitivity and strength, with rods typically 6-12 feet long and rated by action (fast for tip-bending, slow for full-curve) and power (ultralight to heavy).[47] Reels fall into categories including spincast (enclosed, beginner-friendly with fixed spool), spinning (open-faced, versatile for light lines via bail mechanism), baitcasting (low-profile, precise for heavy lures with thumb-controlled spool), and conventional/trolling (level-wind for offshore, high drag for big game).[48] Matching rod to reel—such as spinning rods with front guides for smooth line flow—optimizes performance, with line strengths from 2- to 80-pound test accommodating species from panfish to marlin.[49] Casting techniques rely on the rod's parabolic bend storing kinetic energy during the backcast and forward motion, propelling the lure up to 100-150 feet in skilled hands, while reels manage drag to prevent line breaks during strikes.[50] Fighting fish involves maintaining rod angle at 45 degrees, reeling steadily against tension to tire the catch without snapping tackle, a process empirically reducing escape rates compared to hand-lining.[51] Rod and reel methods yield low bycatch, as non-target species can be released alive, supporting sustainable harvests with catch rates often exceeding 1 fish per hour in targeted freshwater angling.[52]

Specialized Angling Methods

Fly fishing employs a specialized rod, reel, and weighted line to cast lightweight artificial flies that imitate insects or small fish, targeting species such as trout and salmon in rivers and streams. The technique relies on precise casting to present the fly delicately on the water surface or subsurface, minimizing disturbance to wary fish. Developed extensively in 19th-century Britain for game fish, it demands skill in line control and mending to achieve natural drifts.[53][54] Trolling involves towing lures, rigs, or baited lines behind a moving boat at various depths to cover expansive water bodies and provoke strikes from pelagic predators like tuna, marlin, or bluefish. Anglers adjust speed—typically 2-8 knots—and use downriggers or planers to position offerings precisely, often in saltwater environments. This method's efficiency stems from simulating fleeing prey over large areas, with commercial adaptations dating to the early 20th century but recreational use surging post-World War II with outboard motors.[53][55] Jigging uses a heavy-headed lure, or jig, vertically manipulated via rod lifts and drops to mimic injured baitfish, effective for bottom-dwelling or mid-water species including walleye, cod, and snapper from boats, piers, or ice. The motion—ranging from subtle twitches to aggressive "slabbing"—triggers reaction strikes, with jig weights from 1/8 to several ounces selected based on depth and current; endurance is key, as sessions can last hours. Originating in subsistence fishing but refined in modern sport angling since the mid-20th century, it excels in vertical structure like drop-offs.[56][55][57] Baitcasting deploys a revolving-spool reel mounted atop the rod for accurate, long-distance casts of heavier lures like crankbaits or jigs, favored for bass and muskie in freshwater due to control in heavy cover. It requires thumbing the spool to prevent overruns, a skill honed to avoid "bird's nests," contrasting with spinning's fixed-spool design for lighter lines and beginners. Spinning, meanwhile, casts via a bail mechanism, suiting finesse tactics with worms or small spinners, and dominates ultralight applications since its 1940s invention by European engineers. Both enable reaction baits but differ in drag systems and line twist management.[58][54][48] Other variants include surf casting from shorelines with long rods (10-14 feet) and heavy sinkers to combat waves for striped bass or redfish, and ice jigging through frozen lakes with short, stout rods for perch or pike. These adaptations prioritize environmental challenges, with gear rated for corrosion resistance in saltwater or cold-weather durability. Success metrics, per angler reports, hinge on matching technique to habitat—e.g., trolling yields 20-30% higher catch rates in open ocean versus static methods.[56][59]

Netting Techniques

Hand-Held and Cast Nets

Hand-held nets, including dip nets and scoop nets, feature a mesh enclosure affixed to a rigid frame and an attached handle or pole, enabling direct manual capture of fish in shallow waters, from boats, or to assist in landing hooked specimens. These nets typically employ fine mesh to retain small to medium-sized fish, with pole lengths varying from short handles (under 1 meter) for precise landing to extended telescoping aluminum or wooden poles exceeding 3 meters for reaching into deeper shallows or schools. In aquaculture settings, dip nets facilitate the transfer of live fish between tanks or ponds, minimizing stress compared to bare-handed handling, as their design allows quick submersion and gentle scooping. Commercially, they support targeted harvesting in rivers or coastal zones where fish aggregate near surfaces, such as during spawning runs in the Great Lakes, where operators scoop fish into tubs rather than disentangling them manually to reduce injury.[60][61][62][63] Cast nets differ from hand-held scoop types by relying on a thrown, circular deployment to envelop fish, consisting of a central retrieval line connected to a radial mesh cone weighted along its lead-line perimeter with sinkers, which causes the net to flatten upon impact with water before contracting upward during haul. The technique demands skill in spinning and releasing the net to achieve full radial spread, typically over visible schools in shallow, clear waters up to 3-5 meters deep, with retrieval pulling the central line to close the bottom and trap contents. Historical evidence places cast net origins in ancient Egypt by the Middle Kingdom's 12th Dynasty (circa 1991-1802 BCE), where depictions show thrown nets for riverine capture, predating later attributions to the 4th century CE in broader Mediterranean contexts. Primarily employed for subsistence or bait collection—such as shad, mullet, or minnows—these nets yield small hauls per throw (often 1-5 kg for recreational sizes), favoring low-impact, individual operation over large-scale gear.[64][65][66] Regulations govern cast nets to curb overuse and bycatch, with jurisdictions like New Jersey limiting diameters to 20 feet (6.1 meters) or less and mesh sizes to at least 3/8 inch (9.5 mm) stretched to allow juvenile escape, while freshwater rules in some U.S. states cap lengths at 100 feet for related gill variants but permit cast nets for baitfish only in designated areas like below dams. Sink rates and mesh selection influence efficacy: heavier monofilament nets (3-5 mm diameter) descend faster in currents but require greater throwing effort, whereas lighter nylon variants suit calmer shallows but risk incomplete closure if fish evade during retrieval. Compared to fixed nets, both hand-held and cast methods exhibit lower environmental footprint due to their mobility and selectivity for surface-oriented species, though improper use can entangle non-target organisms like birds or turtles in shallow deployments.[67][68][69][70]

Fixed and Drift Nets

Fixed nets, also known as set gillnets or anchored gillnets, consist of vertical panels of netting anchored to the seabed or fixed between stakes driven into the substrate, typically in coastal or intertidal zones.[71] These nets operate passively by entangling fish that swim into them, where the mesh size corresponds to the girth of the target species' body, allowing the head to pass through but catching the gills on retraction.[72] Fixed nets are deployed in static positions, often along shorelines or river mouths, relying on tidal currents or fish migration patterns to bring target species into contact; they have been used for millennia in inshore fisheries targeting demersal or migratory fish like salmon.[73] In practice, a small vessel deploys the net from anchors or poles, leaving it submerged for hours or days before retrieval, with mesh sizes regulated to minimize juvenile capture—typically 10-20 cm for adult fish in many jurisdictions.[74] Drift nets, in contrast, are unanchored gillnets allowed to float freely with ocean currents, often buoyed at the surface and weighted at the bottom to maintain vertical orientation.[75] This method targets pelagic species such as tuna, squid, or herring in open waters, with nets ranging from small coastal versions to historical large-scale panels up to 30 miles long and 30 feet deep, deployed overnight and retrieved by drifting vessels.[76] Originating as one of the simplest gillnet variants, drift netting expanded commercially in the 20th century but faced global scrutiny for indiscriminate capture; the United Nations imposed a moratorium on large-scale high-seas driftnetting in 1989, followed by a full ban in 1992 due to excessive bycatch of non-target marine life including dolphins, seabirds, and sharks.[77] Smaller-scale drift nets persist in some coastal fisheries under strict length and depth limits, such as under 2.5 km in EU waters, to reduce environmental harm.[78] The primary distinction between fixed and drift nets lies in mobility: fixed variants remain stationary to exploit localized fish concentrations with lower fuel use and operational costs, yielding selective catches in predictable habitats, whereas drift nets cover broader areas but increase entanglement risks for mobile non-targets due to their free-drifting nature.[79] Both methods contribute to bycatch—estimated at 10-20% of total catch in gillnet fisheries overall—but drift nets amplify this through "ghost fishing" from lost gear, which continues trapping organisms indefinitely as synthetic meshes degrade slowly and remain invisible to marine life.[80] Fixed nets, while less prone to widespread drift, can damage benthic habitats via anchoring and pose entanglement threats to marine mammals in tidal zones, prompting regulations like seasonal closures in sensitive areas.[81] Empirical data from FAO assessments indicate that proper mesh sizing and monitoring reduce selectivity issues in both, though drift nets' historical overcapacity led to depleted stocks in unregulated fleets.[80]

Trawl Netting

Trawl netting employs a large, funnel-shaped net towed through the water by one or more vessels to capture fish and other marine organisms. The net's mouth is kept open by hydrodynamic devices such as otter boards, which function like underwater wings to provide horizontal spread, while vertical opening is maintained by the net's buoyancy and weight distribution.[82][83] This technique targets species by herding them into the narrowing cod end, a tapered bag where catch accumulates.[3] Two primary variants exist: bottom trawling, which drags the net along the seabed to harvest demersal species like groundfish and crustaceans, and midwater trawling, which operates in the water column for pelagic schooling fish such as herring or mackerel.[84][85] In bottom trawling, ground chains or rock-hopper gear along the net's footrope minimize snagging on uneven terrain while disturbing sediment to flush out prey.[3] Midwater versions avoid seabed contact, using otter boards attached via warps to control depth and spread.[82] The otter trawl design, predominant since its invention in 1894 by Scottish fishermen as an alternative to beam trawls, revolutionized commercial fishing by enabling larger nets without fixed beams.[86] Key components include the headline (upper edge), footrope (lower edge), wings (side panels extending to otter boards), and sweeps (lines connecting boards to net). Trawlers typically deploy nets at speeds of 2-4 knots for durations of 1-6 hours, depending on target depth and vessel power.[84] Environmental effects of bottom trawling include seabed disturbance, which reduces habitat complexity and benthic biodiversity in intensively fished areas, with evidence showing quasi-linear declines in species diversity proportional to effort intensity.[87] However, peer-reviewed analyses indicate limited evidence that trawling significantly accelerates sediment carbon mineralization or alters long-term carbon stocks, challenging claims of outsized climate impacts.[88] Bycatch rates vary by gear modifications and management, with well-regulated fisheries mitigating non-target mortality through escape panels and real-time monitoring.[89] Midwater trawling generally exerts lower benthic pressure, preserving seafloor integrity.[90]

Trapping and Enclosure Methods

Pots and Traps

Pots and traps consist of rigid, enclosed structures, typically constructed from wire mesh, wood, or other materials, designed to lure and retain target species such as crustaceans and certain fish through baited funnels that permit entry while impeding escape.[91] These passive gears are deployed on the seafloor or in water columns, often in strings connected by groundlines and marked by surface buoys for retrieval.[92] Bait placed inside attracts species like lobsters, crabs, and shrimp, which enter voluntarily but find egress restricted by one-way entrances or maze-like interiors.[93] Common designs include D-shaped lobster pots with multiple funnel entrances, rectangular or semi-cylindrical crab traps, and arrow-shaped variants for specific species like lobsters in regions such as India's southwest coast.[94] Fish traps may incorporate nets or baskets, such as fyke nets with extending wings to guide prey.[95] Deployment involves weighting the gear to sink to suitable depths, typically 10-100 meters for demersal species, with retrieval occurring after soak times of 24-48 hours to maximize catch while minimizing stress on non-targets.[96] These methods offer selectivity through species-specific sizing of entrances and escape vents, reducing bycatch compared to active gears like trawls; for instance, pots in Mediterranean fisheries show lower discard rates and minimal seabed disturbance.[97] Fuel efficiency is high due to passive operation, and habitat impacts are limited to localized dragging during setting and hauling.[98] However, lost pots contribute to ghost fishing, where derelict gear continues capturing organisms, potentially altering local ecosystems; studies indicate this can persist for years without intervention.[99] Environmental concerns include entanglement risks to marine mammals, such as humpback whales in vertical lines, prompting regulations like the U.S. Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan, which mandates gear marking and minimum trap-per-trawl requirements—e.g., at least 15 traps per trawl in certain Northeast lobster areas as of May 2022.[100] NOAA and FAO guidelines emphasize biodegradable panels in pots to mitigate ghost fishing and bycatch reduction devices.[101] Despite these, vertical line interactions remain a challenge, with pot fisheries classified under marine mammal protection frameworks to enforce compliance.[102]

Fish Weirs and Corrals

Fish weirs consist of barriers constructed across rivers, streams, or tidal zones to intercept and concentrate migrating fish into traps or holding areas, exploiting natural currents or tides for passive capture. These structures, typically made from stone, wood, wattle, or bamboo, date back at least 8,000 years in Mesolithic Europe and 5,000 years in North America, with archaeological evidence including submerged stone alignments in coastal Brittany and intertidal V-shaped hedges in medieval Wales.[103][104][105] In operation, fish enter through gaps during high flow and become trapped as water levels recede, allowing selective harvesting; for instance, Cherokee communities in the southeastern United States built weirs in shallow streams to capture species like trout and bass, as evidenced by middens near weir sites indicating high yields.[106][107] Fish corrals, by contrast, form enclosed pens or lagoons, often in coastal or reef flats, using stakes, nets, or brush fences to impound fish as tides ebb, facilitating communal drives or hand collection. Documented in the Philippines since at least 1916, these include bamboo-staked enclosures in Batangas Bay for species like mullet and sardines, while in northern Brazil's Pará state, wooden corrals target crabs and finfish in mangrove zones.[108][109] Pacific indigenous practices, such as those in Panama and American Samoa, combine stone walls with wooden tops for tide-trapping, supporting sustainable yields through seasonal use.[110][111] Both methods emphasize low-effort, tide-dependent efficiency over active pursuit, with historical success tied to site-specific hydrology; for example, Taiwanese stone weirs captured volumes via tidal influx, though overharvesting risks prompted communal management. Modern adaptations include salmon monitoring weirs in Alaska and the Columbia River, where rotary screw traps enable live release of non-target fish, informing stock assessments under regulations like NOAA guidelines prohibiting harm to endangered salmonids.[112][113][114][115] In regulated areas, such as California waters, weir use near dams or fishways is restricted to 250 feet to protect migrations, prioritizing conservation over commercial scale.[116]

Purse Seining

Purse seining involves deploying a large, curtain-like net to encircle a school of fish near the surface, followed by tightening a drawstring at the bottom to form a deep "bag" that traps the fish, preventing escape.[117] The technique targets pelagic species that aggregate in dense schools, allowing for high-volume capture in open waters.[118] Nets typically measure 1,500 to 2,000 meters in length and 200 to 300 meters in depth, with mesh sizes varying by target species and region to optimize selectivity.[118] The net consists of a float line at the top, a leaded bottom line, and purse rings through which a braided wire or rope (the purse line) passes to cinch the base closed.[119] Deployment occurs from specialized vessels, often aided by spotter planes, helicopters, or sonar to locate schools; the net is paid out from the stern or side as the vessel circles the aggregation.[117] Once encircled, the purse line is hauled via power blocks or winches, drawing the bottom upward; fish are then transferred aboard using pumps, brailing scoops, or brailer nets.[119] Vessels range from small artisanal boats using manual hauls to industrial purse seiners exceeding 100 meters in length, equipped with refrigerated seawater systems for preserving catches like tuna.[120] Primary targets include sardines, herring, mackerel, and tunas such as skipjack, yellowfin, and albacore, which form surface-oriented schools responsive to visual or acoustic cues.[121] In tropical fisheries, fish aggregating devices (FADs)—floating rafts or buoys—enhance school detection but can attract non-target species.[122] The method's efficiency stems from its ability to harvest up to several hundred tons per set in compact operations, minimizing fuel use compared to diffuse techniques like longlining.[123] Despite selectivity for schooling pelagics, purse seining is non-discriminatory within the encircled volume, capturing bycatch such as sharks, rays, billfishes, sea turtles, and marine mammals that overlap with targets.[118][124] Bycatch rates vary by region and gear; in tropical tuna purse seines, discards comprise 1-5% of total catch, with over 90% retention of tunas but incidental mortality for sensitive species like turtles entangled during hauling.[124] Mitigation includes turtle excluder devices, backdown procedures to release encircled turtles, and gear modifications, though coverage remains inconsistent due to limited observer programs.[118] Regulations, such as those from regional fisheries management organizations, impose FAD management plans and bycatch reporting, but enforcement gaps persist in high-seas operations.[125] Environmental assessments note lower seabed impact than bottom trawls but highlight risks to ecosystem structure from juvenile bycatch and FAD drift pollution.[123]

Auxiliary Methods

Animal-Assisted Fishing

Animal-assisted fishing involves training animals to capture or herd fish, leveraging their natural predatory instincts to enhance human catches. This practice dates back millennia, with evidence of Egyptians employing cormorants around 3,000 years ago to dive for fish while restrained by snares to prevent consumption of larger prey.[126] Such methods persist in select regions, primarily through the use of cormorants and otters, though they face decline due to modernization and animal welfare concerns. Cormorant fishing, known as ukai in Japan, exemplifies a refined technique practiced for over 1,300 years on rivers like the Nagara in Gifu Prefecture. Trained Phalacrocorax carbo cormorants, controlled by a usho master via leashes, dive to catch species such as ayu (sweetfish, Plecoglossus altivelis), with a ring or snare around the bird's neck ensuring fish are regurgitated rather than swallowed.[127][128] Each usho manages 10 to 12 birds during nocturnal operations illuminated by torches, from mid-May to mid-October, yielding catches that historically supported local economies and imperial rituals.[129] Variants occur on the Hiji and Mikuma rivers, where awase ukai integrates multiple boats for synchronized herding.[130][131] Otter-assisted fishing, documented since at least the 6th century in South Asia, utilizes smooth-coated otters (Lutrogale perspicillata) to drive fish into nets. In Bangladesh's rivers and the Sundarbans, fishermen release trained otters—often captured as pups and conditioned to herd rather than consume prey—from boats, exploiting the animals' agility to corral shoals toward human-set gear.[132] This symbiotic approach, noted by Marco Polo in the 13th century, boosts yields in murky waters but has waned with overfishing, habitat loss, and protective legislation, rendering it a rare tradition confined to remote communities.[133] While less widespread, analogous uses of other animals include historical accounts of dogs herding fish into traps, akin to sheepdogs, as observed among certain riverine groups, though empirical records remain sparse compared to avian and mustelid methods.[134] These techniques underscore early human-animal cooperation but raise ethical questions regarding animal welfare, with modern practitioners emphasizing selective breeding and minimal restraint to sustain cultural heritage amid declining viability.[135]

Electrified Fishing

Electrified fishing, commonly termed electrofishing, employs pulsed direct current electricity delivered through submerged electrodes to generate an electric field in freshwater environments, temporarily stunning fish via induced neuromuscular blockade and causing them to become buoyant for netting. The process relies on fish entering the field, where voltages typically range from 100 to 1000 volts depending on water conductivity and target species, leading to tetanic contractions or narcosis without requiring physical pursuit. Recovery occurs rapidly upon removal from the field, often within minutes, enabling release in scientific applications.[136][137] This method originated from 19th-century physiological experiments demonstrating electric currents' influence on fish locomotion, evolving into practical tools by the mid-20th century for fisheries assessment, with backpack units for streams and boat-mounted systems for lakes. Primarily applied in population sampling, it provides data on species composition, size distributions, and biomass estimates, informing management decisions such as stocking or habitat restoration. Effectiveness depends on factors like water depth, conductivity (optimal 50-200 μS/cm), and pulse frequency (30-120 Hz), with modified waveforms reducing injury risk compared to unmodified alternating current.[138][139][140] While mortality is minimized through standardized protocols—often below 4% for immediate post-capture death and under 10% for delayed effects in tolerant species—vulnerable taxa like salmonids exhibit higher susceptibility to spinal fractures, hemorrhages, and osmotic stress, with injury rates up to 20-30% in suboptimal conditions. Environmental variables, including temperature and oxygen levels, exacerbate sublethal impacts such as reduced swimming performance or reproductive impairment, potentially skewing population data if not accounted for. Non-target organisms, including amphibians and invertebrates, face similar risks within the field radius of approximately 5 meters.[141][142][143] Regulations in the United States and many other countries permit electrofishing solely for authorized research or resource management under permits from agencies like the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, prohibiting its use for recreational or commercial harvest to prevent overexploitation and ensure equity. Operators must adhere to safety measures, including maintaining distances from bystanders (e.g., 30-100 feet) and using protective gear, due to risks of electrocution in conductive waters. Violations, such as unauthorized poaching, incur penalties, reflecting concerns over ecosystem disruption despite its utility in controlled settings.[144][145][146]

Industrial and Mechanical Techniques

Longlining

Longline fishing employs a primary horizontal line, typically spanning 1 to 100 kilometers in length, from which numerous shorter branch lines bearing baited hooks extend at regular intervals, targeting predatory fish species through passive attraction.[147] This method relies on the main line's material—often monofilament nylon for reduced visibility and strength—combined with weighted anchors or floats to position the gear at desired depths, allowing hooks to "soak" for hours before retrieval.[148] The technique's selectivity stems from baited hooks that exploit natural foraging behaviors, distinguishing it from non-selective nets by enabling targeted capture of high-value species like tuna and swordfish, though operational efficiency varies with line length, hook count (up to thousands per set), and bait type such as squid or mackerel.[149] Two principal variants exist: demersal (bottom) longlining, which deploys weighted main lines along the seafloor to intercept benthic or near-bottom species, and pelagic longlining, which uses buoys and floats to suspend lines in the water column at surface or mid-depths (typically 50-300 meters).[150][151] Demersal sets, common in shelf and slope fisheries, employ anchors and ground lines to maintain contact with substrates, targeting demersal fish such as cod, halibut, and sablefish, with gear hauled mechanically to minimize seabed abrasion compared to trawling.[150] Pelagic configurations, by contrast, prioritize open-ocean predators via unweighted or buoy-suspended lines that drift with currents, facilitating catches of epipelagic species including bigeye tuna, albacore, and billfish, often deployed from vessels using automated baiting and setting machines for extended operations.[152] These differences in deployment—bottom lines sinking via weights versus pelagic lines buoyed for suspension—directly influence catch composition and habitat interaction, with pelagic methods covering vast areas (up to 100 km per set) to exploit migratory patterns.[153] Operationally, longlines are set at dawn or dusk to align with peak feeding activity, soaked for 4-12 hours, and retrieved via hydraulic haulers that process hooks sequentially, discarding undersized or non-target captures.[154] Globally, longline fisheries contribute to targeted harvests of premium species, with pelagic tuna longlining accounting for a portion of the stable 5 million tonne annual tuna catch, though exact longline-specific volumes remain subsets of broader gear data reported by organizations like the FAO.[155] Economic viability derives from high product quality—fish arrive whole and undamaged—supporting markets for sashimi-grade tuna, yet scalability is limited by labor-intensive baiting and gear loss risks from snags or predation.[156] Ecological concerns center on bycatch, averaging over 20% of total catch, encompassing seabirds (e.g., albatrosses hooked during surface sets), sea turtles, and sharks that ingest baited lines, leading to post-release mortality from injuries or exhaustion.[157] Seabird interactions, particularly in pelagic fisheries, result from scavenging bait, with estimates of hundreds of thousands annually before mitigations; causal factors include line setting in bird-prone areas and visible baits.[158] Shark bycatch, often involving fins for trade, exacerbates population declines in vulnerable species, while turtle entanglements stem from surface hooks mimicking prey.[159] Countermeasures, validated empirically, include circle hooks that reduce gut-hooking in non-targets, weighted branch lines to sink gear below bird reach, and bird-scaring tori lines trailing streamers to deter dives, achieving bycatch reductions of 60-90% in trials.[157] Deep demersal longlining shows lower incidental damage to vulnerable marine ecosystems like cold-water corals compared to mobile gears, as hooks contact minimal substrate area.[160] Despite these, incomplete adoption and gear drift in currents sustain localized impacts, underscoring the need for real-time monitoring via vessel tracking and environmental modeling to avoid high-bycatch zones.[161]

Dredging

Dredging is a demersal fishing technique that involves towing a heavy, rigid frame—known as a dredge—across the seabed to harvest bottom-dwelling invertebrates, primarily bivalve mollusks like sea scallops (Placopecten magellanicus), oysters (Crassostrea spp.), and clams.[162][163] The gear consists of a mouth frame with an attached collection bag or apron, often fitted with a cutting bar, teeth, or chain matrix that scrapes or penetrates the sediment to dislodge target species, which are then retained while finer material passes through.[162][164] Operations vary by vessel type, with smaller hand-operated dredges used in shallow inshore waters and larger towed versions deployed from commercial boats, sometimes via outriggers for multiple units.[163][165] Scallop dredges typically feature a sharp underbar for scraping sandy or gravelly bottoms, while oyster or clam dredges may incorporate rake-like teeth to uncover buried individuals.[164] Tow duration, speed, and patterns are adjusted based on seabed substrate and target density, with vessels often making repeated passes over productive grounds.[162] Selectivity is low, as the method captures non-target benthic organisms and juveniles, contributing to bycatch that includes finfish, crabs, and other invertebrates.[162] Ecological impacts of dredging include acute disturbance to seafloor habitats, with gear penetration removing surface sediments, biota, and structural complexity, leading to reduced biodiversity and slower recovery in sensitive areas like maerl beds.[166] Field studies have documented over 70% declines in live maerl coverage post-dredging, persisting without recovery for at least four years, alongside decreased macrofaunal densities.[167] In jurisdictions like the United States, dredging is regulated under frameworks such as those from NOAA Fisheries, incorporating vessel limits, seasonal restrictions, and closed areas to curb overexploitation and habitat damage.[162]

Other Mechanical Harvesting

Trawling represents a dominant mechanical harvesting method in industrial fisheries, utilizing motorized vessels to tow large conical nets through marine environments to capture aggregations of fish and other marine organisms.[168] The technique relies on the propulsion of the vessel to actively pursue and encircle target species, distinguishing it from passive netting approaches. Bottom trawling deploys the net along the seabed to target demersal species such as flatfish, cod, and shrimp, where weighted doors or beams keep the net mouth open while ground gear disturbs the substrate to herd fish upward.[84] Midwater or pelagic trawling, by contrast, operates in the water column to pursue schooling fish like herring, mackerel, and pollock, often guided by sonar for precise deployment.[168] Global capture from demersal trawling comprises about 25% of marine wild fish production, with pelagic variants adding roughly 10%, totaling over one-third of annual harvests reported by the FAO.[169] Efficiency stems from the scalability of vessel power, enabling high-volume yields; for instance, modern trawlers can process tens of thousands of tons per season in productive grounds like the North Atlantic or Bering Sea.[170] However, discard rates in trawl operations frequently reach 20-70% of total catch by weight, varying by depth, target species, and regulatory sorting requirements, leading to substantial biomass loss and potential ecosystem disruption from unutilized bycatch.[170] Variations include beam trawling, which employs rigid beams up to 12 meters long to spread the net without otter boards, commonly used for species like sole in the North Sea, and pair trawling, where two vessels coordinate to tow a single net, enhancing stability and range for pelagic targets.[7] Mechanical innovations such as pulse trawls, introduced in European fleets around 2010, use electrical stimuli to provoke fish movement rather than physical disturbance, reportedly reducing fuel consumption by up to 50% and bycatch of non-target species like cod by similar margins in sole fisheries.[171] In freshwater and riverine settings, fish wheels provide another mechanical harvesting option, consisting of waterwheel-like structures with rotating baskets powered by river currents to intercept upstream-migrating salmonids. Originating in the Pacific Northwest during the 1870s, these devices continuously scoop fish into holding areas for live storage, minimizing handling mortality and enabling selective harvest under quotas; contemporary models in Alaska rivers process hundreds of fish per day during peak runs.[172] Unlike vessel-based trawling, fish wheels operate semi-autonomously with minimal fuel input, though their use remains regulated to prevent overexploitation of anadromous stocks.[173]

Modern and Emerging Technologies

Fish-Finding and Automation

Fish-finding technologies primarily rely on acoustic methods such as echosounders and sonar systems, which emit sound pulses into the water column and detect echoes reflected from fish, particularly due to the air-filled swim bladders that enhance acoustic backscattering.[174] These devices, mounted on vessels, provide real-time data on fish density, school size, and depth, enabling targeted deployment of gear like trawls or longlines to improve catch efficiency and reduce fuel consumption.[175] Commercial echosounders, operational since the mid-20th century but refined with multibeam and multifrequency capabilities, distinguish fish species by echo patterns and integrate with chartplotters for mapping aggregations.[176] Advanced variants include net sounders affixed to fishing gear, which use wide-angle sonar to monitor fish entry into nets during trawling, transmitting data wirelessly to vessel displays for haul optimization and minimizing bycatch through timely adjustments.[177] Emerging integrations of artificial intelligence with echosounders enable automatic single-fish detection, processing raw acoustic data to classify targets amid noise from plankton or debris, as demonstrated in studies on commercial vessels where algorithms achieve high precision in vertical profiling.[178] Beyond acoustics, satellite-based methods leverage synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery combined with machine learning to identify vessel positions and infer fishing hotspots, filling gaps in vessel monitoring systems (VMS) data, particularly for fleets in remote or unregulated areas.[179] Global Fishing Watch, for instance, processes over 20 million vessel detections annually from satellite and GPS sources to map industrial fishing activity, revealing patterns like seasonal migrations that inform predictive models for fish location.[180] Automation in fishing extends these detection capabilities through unmanned systems, including autonomous surface vessels (ASVs) equipped with sonar and AI for surveying fish stocks without crew exposure to hazards, as tested by NOAA for abundance estimation in protected waters.[181] Maritime robotics firms deploy ASVs with integrated navigation and object recognition to patrol exclusion zones or conduct persistent acoustic transects, reducing operational costs by up to 50% compared to manned boats in preliminary trials.[182] In processing stages, robotic systems automate fillet trimming and sorting using computer vision, addressing labor shortages in high-volume plants; for example, adaptive robots handle variable fish shapes with precision exceeding human consistency, processing thousands of units per hour.[183] Fully autonomous fishing vessels, propelled by subsidies and regulatory pilots, simulate decision-making for gear deployment based on real-time sensor fusion, potentially accelerating adoption by a decade while enhancing data granularity for stock assessments.[184] These technologies prioritize empirical detection over guesswork, though challenges persist in algorithmic biases toward certain species or environmental conditions, necessitating validation against ground-truthed surveys.[185]

Sustainable Gear Innovations

Sustainable fishing gear innovations focus on minimizing environmental impacts such as bycatch, ghost fishing from lost gear, marine mammal entanglements, and plastic pollution while preserving target species catch rates. These developments often incorporate materials that degrade naturally or technologies that enhance selectivity, driven by regulatory pressures and empirical studies demonstrating long-term ecological benefits. For instance, advancements in biodegradable polymers for nets and lines aim to counteract the persistence of conventional synthetics, which can trap marine life indefinitely after loss.[186] Similarly, modifications like specialized hooks and lighting systems promote escape of non-target species, supported by field trials quantifying reduced mortality. Biodegradable fishing nets represent a key response to ghost fishing, where derelict gear continues capturing organisms, contributing to up to 640,000 tonnes of annual marine debris. Prototypes developed in Norway since 2023 utilize biopolymers that degrade within 1-2 years in seawater, outperforming traditional nylon in reducing microplastic release while maintaining initial catch efficiency comparable to standard nets in short-term deployments.[187] [188] In the European Union's Puglia region, a 2025 project tested biodegradable prototypes from sustainable materials like algae-based composites, achieving partial degradation in marine trials and collaboration with local fishers to refine durability against operational wear.[189] However, economic analyses indicate these nets may incur higher upfront costs and slightly lower efficiency over full service life, potentially limiting adoption without subsidies.[190] Circle hooks, with their offset design promoting jaw rather than gut hooking, have been validated in multiple pelagic longline studies for bycatch mitigation. A 2023 Azores trial showed circle hooks reduced sea turtle interactions by 40-60% compared to J-hooks, with no significant drop in target tuna catches, attributing efficacy to altered hooking mechanics that facilitate release.[191] Brazil's 2004 mandate for circle hooks in Atlantic swordfish fisheries halved turtle bycatch rates per peer-reviewed assessments, though shark catches increased by up to 20% in some deep-water scenarios, necessitating hybrid strategies.[192] [193] Illumination technologies, such as green LED lights affixed to gillnets, enhance gear visibility to non-target species, enabling evasion without compromising primary hauls. Trials in the Indian Ocean in 2022 demonstrated 95% reductions in shark and skate bycatch alongside stable target fish retention, as lights create a deterrent barrier detectable by electro-sensitive organs in elasmobranchs.[194] [195] Deployments are energy-efficient, with battery-powered units lasting full fishing cycles, and cost analyses project payback within one season via reduced sorting labor.[196] Ropeless or on-demand trap systems eliminate persistent vertical lines that entangle large whales, deploying buoys acoustically summoned to the surface only during retrieval. NOAA-funded prototypes tested in 2025 reduced rope exposure in the water column by over 90% for lobster and crab pots, with acoustic release mechanisms achieving 99% retrieval success in New England trials, addressing right whale entanglement risks documented at 80+ incidents since 2017.[197] [198] Variable buoyancy designs, refined by 2024, minimize habitat disruption but require fisher training and initial investments exceeding $10,000 per vessel, with scalability dependent on regulatory incentives.[199]

Destructive and Prohibited Methods

Explosives and Poisons

Explosive fishing, also known as blast or dynamite fishing, involves detonating underwater explosives such as dynamite, homemade bombs from fertilizers, or scavenged munitions to create shockwaves that stun or kill fish within a radius, allowing easy collection of floating carcasses.[200] This method has persisted since at least the mid-20th century in regions like Southeast Asia and East Africa, driven by short-term economic incentives where a single blast can yield catches equivalent to days of traditional line fishing, though yields decline rapidly due to habitat destruction.[201] Ecologically, blasts pulverize coral reefs—key fish habitats—reducing structural complexity by up to 50% in affected areas and causing mortality in non-target species including juveniles, with recovery times exceeding decades in heavily bombed sites.[202] Studies document biodiversity losses of 40-70% in reef fish assemblages post-blasting, as the shockwaves rupture fish swim bladders and dislodge sessile organisms, while sediment resuspension smothers remaining corals.[200] Poisons in fishing, particularly cyanide-based chemofishing, entail injecting or dispersing toxins like sodium cyanide into reef crevices to stun fish for live capture, often targeting high-value species for the aquarium trade.[203] This practice emerged prominently in the 1980s in the Philippines and Indonesia, where it supplies over 90% of the global marine ornamental fish market, but cyanide persists in water columns, killing algae and invertebrates that sustain reef ecosystems.[204] Impacts include coral bleaching and mortality rates up to 10-20% from direct poisoning, alongside bioaccumulation in food webs that contaminates edible fish with residues harmful to human consumers.[204] Other poisons, such as plant-derived rotenone or deris root extracts used historically in subsistence fishing, similarly decimate non-target populations by disrupting gill function or nervous systems, though less studied quantitatively.[205] Both methods are prohibited under international frameworks like the UN Fish Stocks Agreement and national laws in over 100 countries, including bans enforced since the 1950s in the Philippines for blast fishing, due to their classification as destructive practices causing irrecoverable habitat degradation rather than sustainable harvest.[206] Enforcement challenges persist in artisanal fleets, where poverty incentivizes use despite documented livelihood collapses—e.g., a 2023 Sri Lankan study linked dynamite blasts to 30% fishery yield drops over five years.[207] Empirical data from acoustic surveys and diver transects confirm these techniques' causal role in ecosystem collapse, outweighing any purported efficiency gains, as fragmented reefs support 70-90% fewer fish biomass long-term compared to intact systems.[208]

Other Harmful Practices

Muro-ami, a drive-in fishing technique originating from Japan and introduced to regions like the Philippines in the 1930s, involves groups of divers—often including children—pounding coral reefs or the water surface with sticks to frighten fish into surrounding nets, causing extensive physical damage to reef structures through abrasion and breakage.[209] This method has been prohibited in areas such as Indonesia's Karimunjawa National Park since 2011, after which herbivorous fish populations increased, indicating ecosystem recovery from prior habitat destruction.[210] [211] The practice's legacy effects, including reduced branching coral cover, persist due to the slow regeneration of damaged reefs, exacerbating vulnerability to other stressors like bleaching.[212] Fine-mesh or small-mesh nets, often with apertures as small as 5 millimeters, are deployed illegally in many Southeast Asian fisheries to capture juvenile fish indiscriminately, depleting future breeding stocks and disrupting population dynamics.[213] Such gear violates minimum mesh size regulations established under frameworks like the FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries, which aim to allow undersized fish to escape and sustain yields. Enforcement challenges in small-scale fisheries perpetuate their use, leading to overfishing and ecosystem imbalance, as evidenced by declining catches reported in affected regions.[214] Ghost fishing occurs when lost, abandoned, or derelict fishing gear—such as nets, traps, and lines—continues to entrap and kill marine organisms long after deployment, contributing to unaccounted mortality of target species like crabs and non-target species including endangered sea turtles and marine mammals.[215] In U.S. waters, for instance, derelict pots have been documented killing red king crabs at rates of up to 13 individuals per incident in localized studies, while globally, such gear damages sensitive habitats like coral reefs by abrading structures and preventing regrowth.[216] [217] Economic losses from gear replacement and competition with active fisheries compound the ecological harm, with NOAA estimating derelict gear as a persistent threat requiring targeted removal efforts.[218] Large-scale driftnetting, involving gillnets exceeding 2.5 kilometers in length, has been internationally prohibited since the 1991 UN General Assembly resolution due to its indiscriminate capture of dolphins, sharks, and seabirds alongside target fish, earning the moniker "walls of death" for bycatch rates that can exceed 70% of total catch in some deployments.[219] Despite the ban, illegal use persists in high-seas areas, undermining stock recovery for species like swordfish, where only about 12.5% of driftnet catches consist of the intended target.[220] Regulatory bodies like NOAA enforce prohibitions through vessel monitoring, but surveillance gaps allow continued deployment, amplifying pressure on overexploited pelagic ecosystems.[221]

Historical Evolution

Origins in Prehistory

The earliest evidence of deliberate fishing techniques dates to the Upper Paleolithic period, with shellfish gathering and opportunistic capture of fish likely preceding more specialized methods among anatomically modern humans. Archaeological sites along coastal regions, such as Blombos Cave in South Africa (dated to approximately 100,000 years ago), yield fish remains indicating consumption, though direct tool evidence is sparse and may reflect simple hand collection or spearing rather than advanced gear. By around 42,000 years ago, shell fish hooks from Jerimalai Cave in East Timor demonstrate sophisticated line-and-hook fishing targeting reef fish, suggesting early humans ventured into deeper waters using watercraft or wading, as evidenced by over 38,000 fish bones dominated by species requiring such methods.[222][223] In Eurasia, bone fish hooks and grooved stone sinkers from the Epipaleolithic site of Jordan River Dureijat in Israel, dated to 23,000–19,500 years ago, indicate line fishing with weights for targeting larger freshwater species in the Hula Valley, marking one of the earliest instances of composite gear involving cordage inferred from wear patterns.[224] Concurrently, engravings on slate plaques from the Gönnersdorf site in Germany, approximately 15,800 years old, depict what appear to be fish traps or woven nets, providing the oldest artistic representation of passive capture structures and implying communal strategies in riverine environments during the Late Glacial period.[225][226] These artifacts, analyzed through microscopy and contextual faunal remains, underscore a transition from individualistic spearing—evidenced by barbed points from sites like Kebara Cave (Early Natufian, ~15,000 years ago)—to more efficient, resource-intensive techniques amid post-glacial ecological shifts.[224] Mesolithic developments further refined these origins, with leister prongs (multi-tined spears) and harpoons appearing in northern European sites like Ajvide, Sweden (~8,000 years ago), suited for spearing migratory fish in shallow waters, as confirmed by morphological analysis of bone tools and associated ichthyofaunal assemblages.[227] Traps and weirs, constructed from wood and stone, emerge in wetland contexts such as Syltholm Fjord, Denmark (Mesolithic, ~6,500 years ago), where preserved stakes suggest stationary barriers funneling fish for easy harvest, reflecting adaptive responses to seasonal abundances without metal tools.[228] In the Americas, salmon bones from Alaskan sites dated to 11,500 years ago indicate early exploitation of anadromous runs, likely via weirs or gorges (notched baited sticks), highlighting parallel innovations driven by environmental availability rather than cultural diffusion.[229] Overall, prehistoric fishing originated from necessity in aquatic ecosystems, evolving through empirical trial toward gear that maximized caloric return per effort, as inferred from tool durability and site-specific prey spectra.

Ancient and Medieval Developments

In ancient Egypt, by approximately 3000 BCE, fishermen employed harpooning with barbed spears, hand-lines baited with insects or small fish, and drag nets woven from papyrus reeds or flax to capture Nile perch and other species, as depicted in tomb reliefs and artifacts.[230][231] Traps such as basket weirs placed in river currents also facilitated passive capture of migratory fish, reflecting adaptations to the Nile's seasonal floods for reliable protein sources.[232] These methods prioritized efficiency in shallow, predictable waters, with evidence from archaeological sites showing bronze hooks emerging around 2000 BCE to replace bone or shell variants for better durability.[233] In ancient Greece and Rome, from the 8th century BCE onward, techniques expanded to include tridents and spears for spearfishing in coastal areas, alongside cast nets and beach seines operated by teams to encircle schools of tuna and sardines in the Aegean and Mediterranean.[234][235] Fish weirs constructed from stones or stakes funneled species like mullet into traps, while early angling rods and lines—often paired with natural baits—targeted individual fish, as described in texts by Oppian and archaeological finds of lead sinkers.[234] These innovations supported commercial trade, with salted fish products exported across the empire, though overexploitation in enclosed bays prompted local restrictions by the Roman era.[236] During the medieval period in Europe (circa 500–1500 CE), fishing intensified with the adoption of long-lines—single lines bearing multiple hooks baited for demersal species like cod—and larger drift nets for herring shoals, enabling scaled operations from monasteries and coastal villages.[237][238] Stone and wooden weirs proliferated along rivers like the Thames, trapping salmon and eels during migrations, while pot traps (basket-like enclosures) captured crustaceans and smaller fish passively.[239] Zooarchaeological data indicate a shift to intensive marine exploitation around 1000 CE in England, driven by population growth and Christian fasting demands that increased herring catches by factors of tenfold in some regions.[240][238] Overfishing pressures led to early regulations, such as 12th-century English laws limiting weirs to prevent river blockages and preserve sturgeon stocks for elites.[241] In Asia, cormorant herding—training birds to catch fish while leashed—persisted as a selective technique in China from the Tang dynasty (618–907 CE), yielding high-value carp for imperial tables without damaging gear.[242]

Industrialization and Modern Advances

The industrialization of fishing techniques began in the mid-19th century with the adoption of steam power, enabling vessels to operate farther offshore and in adverse conditions compared to sail-powered boats. The first steam trawler, Enterprize, was launched in 1854, though practical steam screw trawlers emerged in the 1870s, with 225 such vessels operating in the United Kingdom by 1883.[243] This shift allowed for beam trawling on a larger scale, replacing labor-intensive sailing smacks and increasing catch efficiency, as steam engines provided consistent propulsion independent of wind.[244] By the early 20th century, steam trawlers dominated fleets in regions like New England, transitioning groundfishing from sail to steam between 1900 and 1920, which expanded operational ranges and supported growing urban demand for fish.[245] The interwar period and post-World War II era marked further mechanization with diesel engines, which offered greater fuel efficiency and reliability over steam. Marine diesel applications in fishing boats proliferated from the 1920s, with early installations in salmon seiners by 1925, reducing operational costs and enabling longer voyages.[246] [247] Otter trawls, introduced around 1908, combined with diesel-powered vessels, amplified harvesting capacity, while innovations like the hydraulic power block in 1955 facilitated safer and faster retrieval of purse seine nets.[244] [248] These advances post-1930 dramatically boosted global commercial catches, with World War II technologies accelerating the extraction of marine resources through enhanced vessel capabilities.[248] Modern historical developments through the late 20th century included refrigeration and processing onboard, allowing fresh fish transport over vast distances and integrating capture with immediate preservation. By the 1950s, factory trawlers processed catches at sea, supporting industrial-scale operations that elevated global marine and freshwater fish landings from modest pre-industrial levels to tens of millions of metric tons annually by the 1970s. Synthetic nets and stronger materials further reduced drag and increased net durability, contributing to yield surges but also straining fish stocks in targeted areas.[248] These cumulative changes transformed fishing from artisanal pursuits to capital-intensive industries, with fleets doubling operational distances since 1950 while adapting to resource pressures.[249]

Ecological and Economic Considerations

Impacts on Ecosystems

Bottom trawling, a common demersal fishing method, physically disrupts seafloor habitats by scraping and disturbing sediments, leading to the destruction of benthic communities including corals, sponges, and infaunal organisms that may take centuries to recover.[250][251] Studies indicate that repeated trawling reduces biodiversity in deep-sea ecosystems, with evidence from continental slopes showing degradation of sedimentary structures and long-term impairment of habitat complexity.[87] While some research debates the extent of trawling's role in sediment carbon mineralization, the consensus highlights its role in altering ecosystem structure through habitat homogenization.[88] Bycatch, the incidental capture of non-target species in gears like longlines, gillnets, and trawls, contributes to population declines in vulnerable taxa such as seabirds, marine mammals, sea turtles, and juvenile fish, disrupting food webs and reducing overall biodiversity.[252][253] Globally, bycatch affects predator-prey dynamics, potentially leading to overpopulation of prey species or cascading effects on lower trophic levels, with estimates indicating significant threats to recovering populations of protected species.[254] Discards from bycatch exacerbate these issues, as unreported mortality hinders accurate assessment of fishery impacts on non-target stocks.[255] Overfishing via selective removal of top predators triggers trophic cascades, as observed in the Black Sea where depletion of large fish led to jellyfish blooms and reduced zooplankton control, altering primary productivity.[256] Similar patterns occur in other systems, such as the North Atlantic, where shark declines allowed cownose ray populations to surge, overgrazing bivalves and collapsing scallop fisheries.[257] These cascades propagate downward, potentially causing regime shifts like algal overgrowth or loss of structural habitats in kelp forests and coral reefs due to unchecked herbivore populations.[258] Ghost fishing from lost or abandoned gear, particularly traps and nets, continues to trap and kill marine life post-deployment, compounding habitat damage and contributing to unreported mortality across trophic levels.[259] Commercial fisheries overall disturb ocean biological carbon pumps by affecting plankton and higher trophic interactions, with mobile gears like trawls implicated in reduced carbon sequestration efficiency.[260] Empirical data from global assessments underscore that these technique-specific impacts, when unmanaged, erode ecosystem resilience and services such as nutrient cycling and prey availability.[261]

Sustainability Debates and Management

Approximately one-third of the world's assessed fish stocks are overexploited or depleted, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization's (FAO) 2024 assessment, with global capture fisheries production stabilizing at around 91 million tonnes annually amid pressures from overfishing and environmental changes.[262] [263] Debates on sustainability often focus on the ecological footprints of techniques like bottom trawling, which can disrupt benthic habitats and generate high bycatch, versus more selective methods such as pole-and-line fishing that minimize unintended catches; empirical reviews indicate that trawling's impacts vary by depth, frequency, and ecosystem resilience, with managed applications allowing target stock recovery without irreversible damage in some cases.[88] Critics argue that the prevailing sustainability paradigm, embedded in policies like the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, overlooks inherent biological variability and economic incentives, potentially leading to misguided regulations that prioritize vague long-term yield over adaptive, evidence-based harvest control rules.[264] Fisheries management strategies, including total allowable catches (TACs), individual transferable quotas (ITQs), and marine protected areas (MPAs), have demonstrated effectiveness in rebuilding stocks when paired with robust monitoring and enforcement; for instance, empirical analyses show that regions with science-informed TACs and accountability mechanisms achieve higher biomass levels compared to open-access regimes, where the "tragedy of the commons" drives depletion.[265] [266] Success stories include the U.S. Northeast sea scallop fishery, which rebounded from near-collapse in the 1990s through rotational area closures and effort controls, yielding record harvests by 2022, and the Pacific bluefin tuna stock, which increased over 10-fold since 2010 lows due to international TAC reductions enforced by bodies like the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT).[267] [268] However, biases in stock assessment models—such as over-reliance on industry-reported catch data or optimistic productivity assumptions—can inflate perceived stock health, perpetuating overfishing in poorly monitored fleets, particularly in developing nations or distant-water operations.[269] [270] Challenges persist in addressing illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing, which accounts for up to 30% of global catch and undermines quotas, especially in high-seas areas lacking vessel monitoring; FAO data highlights that while assessed stocks in well-managed jurisdictions like the U.S. and New Zealand show 70-80% sustainability rates, unassessed global stocks—often in regions with weak governance—exhibit higher depletion risks.[271] Management innovations like real-time satellite tracking and rights-based approaches have reduced IUU in ITQ systems, but enforcement gaps and economic disparities favor industrial fleets from nations with advanced technology, displacing artisanal fishers.[272] Peer-reviewed evidence underscores that precautionary harvest strategies, informed by empirical dynamic modeling rather than static models, better accommodate uncertainty and promote long-term viability, though political resistance to quota reductions hampers implementation in overcapacity scenarios.[273]

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