College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska, United States of America.
College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Juneau Center, Juneau, Alaska, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jul 20;13(7):e0201190. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201190. eCollection 2018.
Spatial distributions of fished species must be well characterized to avoid local depletions, identify critical habitat, and predict and mitigate interactions with other fisheries. The Bristol Bay red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) fishery is one of the largest crab fisheries in Alaska. Summer crab distributions have been well documented by decades of bottom trawl surveys. However, crab movement and distribution are poorly understood outside the summer survey period, which creates several management challenges. One important component of fishery management is the existence of no-trawl zones, which are intended to protect crab from bottom trawl fisheries. However, it is difficult to evaluate the placement of no-trawl zones, because most crab bycatch occurs in trawl fisheries during winter when crab distributions are unknown. Daily fishing logs, kept by skippers in the red king crab fleet since 2005, contain detailed information on the spatial distribution of catch and effort of legal sized male crab during the autumn crab fishery. However, data contained in these hand-written logbooks have not been readily accessible. We digitized daily fishing logs from 2005 to 2016 and used spatial information on catch and effort to infer geographic distributions of legal sized male king crab during the crab fishing season. Changes in distribution were tracked across this 12-yr period and comparisons were made between warm and cold temperature regimes. In warm years (2005, 2014-2016), crab aggregated in the center of Bristol Bay, Alaska, while in cold years (2007-2013) they were closer to the Alaska Peninsula. The majority of crab were caught in no-trawl areas (63.4% on average), but variations occurred among years and with temperature regime (40.0-86.8% in no-trawl zones). As temperatures continue to shift in the Bering Sea, it will be important to continue monitoring crab distributions outside the summer survey period.
为避免局部枯竭、确定关键生境、预测和减轻与其他渔业的相互作用,必须对捕捞物种的空间分布进行准确描述。布里斯托尔湾红帝王蟹(Paralithodes camtschaticus)渔业是阿拉斯加最大的蟹类渔业之一。数十年来的底拖网调查已经很好地记录了夏季螃蟹的分布情况。然而,在夏季调查期之外,螃蟹的运动和分布情况了解甚少,这给管理带来了几个挑战。渔业管理的一个重要组成部分是设立禁渔区,目的是保护螃蟹免受底拖网渔业的影响。然而,禁渔区的设置很难评估,因为大多数螃蟹的副渔获物是在冬季发生的,而冬季螃蟹的分布情况尚不清楚。自 2005 年以来,红帝王蟹船队的船长每天都要记录捕鱼日志,详细记录了秋季螃蟹捕捞期间合法尺寸雄蟹的渔获和努力的空间分布情况。然而,这些手写日志中的数据不容易获取。我们对 2005 年至 2016 年的每日捕鱼日志进行了数字化,并利用渔获和努力的空间信息推断出螃蟹捕捞季节期间合法尺寸雄蟹的地理分布情况。在这 12 年期间跟踪了分布的变化,并比较了暖温和低温两种温度模式下的分布情况。在温暖的年份(2005 年、2014-2016 年),螃蟹聚集在阿拉斯加布里斯托尔湾的中心,而在寒冷的年份(2007-2013 年),它们更靠近阿拉斯加半岛。大多数螃蟹是在禁渔区(平均占 63.4%)捕获的,但每年和温度模式都会有变化(禁渔区为 40.0-86.8%)。随着白令海的温度继续变化,继续监测夏季调查期之外的螃蟹分布情况将非常重要。