Home Home

CCAMLR

Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources

  • Home
  • Skip to Content
  • Log in

Search form

  • About CCAMLR
  • Conservation measures
  • Science
  • Fisheries
  • Compliance
  • Data
  • Meetings
  • Publications
  • Circulars
  • English
  • Français
  • Русский
  • Español
  • Home
  • Publications
  • CCAMLR Science
  • CCAMLR Science, Volume 15
  • CCAMLR Science, Volume 15 (2008):107–114

Publications

  • Basic Documents
  • Statistical Bulletin
    • Statistical Bulletin - Archive
  • CCAMLR Brochure
  • CCAMLR Science
    • Table of Contents
  • Conservation measures
    • Browse conservation measures
    • Past and present conservation measures
  • Commission reports
  • Scientific Committee reports
  • Fishery Reports
  • Fishery Reports archive
  • Fishing gear library
  • Fishing-related documents
  • Manuals
  • Posters and other promotional material
  • Scientific Abstracts
  • Order a publication
Print this page
Increase font size
Decrease font size

CCAMLR Science, Volume 15 (2008):107–114

Journal Volume:
CCAMLR Science, Volume 15
Page Numbers:
107–114
Author(s):
Robertson, G., J. Williamson, M. McNeill, S.G. Candy and N. Smith
download attachmentDownload (294.3 KB)

Seabird by-catch by autoline vessels: do line setters increase the sink rate of integrated weight longlines?

Abstract / Description: 

Line setters are used with integrated weight (IW) (50 g m–1 lead core) longlines by some autoline vessels in the Kerguelen and Crozet Islands Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) fisheries to deter seabirds, ostensibly by expediting gear sink rates. A trial was conducted in the Ross Sea to determine the effectiveness of line setters in increasing the sink rates of IW longlines. Time-depth recorders were deployed on lines set with and without a line setter using a paired-treatment design. Sink rates of longlines set with and without a line setter were identical, including in the first few metres of the water column where seabird interactions are likely to be most intense. Longlines deployed with the line setter entered the water several metres closer to the stern of the vessel and commenced sinking sooner, thus increasing slightly (<0.5 m) the depth of longlines for given distances astern. This increase in depth is minor and unlikely to result in substantial reductions in interactions between longlines and seabirds in the Kerguelen and Crozet fisheries.

This page was last modified on 16 Nov 2012

Contact us

Email: ccamlr [at] ccamlr [dot] org
Telephone: +61 3 6210 1111
Fax: +61 3 6224 8744
Address: 181 Macquarie Street, Hobart, 7000, Tasmania, Australia

 

Quick Links

  • List of authorised vessels
  • Job vacancies
  • Schedule of Conservation Measures in Force 2024/25
  • CCAMLR Venue Hire

Recent and Upcoming Meetings

  • WG-SAM-2025
  • WG-ASAM-2025
  • WG-EMM-2025
  • Log in
  • CCAMLR e-groups
  • CCAMLR Discussions
  • Support
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer and Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Webmail
© Copyright - the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources 2025, All rights reserved.  |  Top of page  |  Site by Eighty Options