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Document Description
Title
Impacts
of
otter
trawling
on
infaunal
bivalves
living
in
sandy
bottom
habitats
on the
Grand
Banks
Author
Gilkinson
,
Kent
Dennis
,
1956-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1999.
Biology
Date
1999
Pagination
xvi, 277 leaves : ill., maps
Subject
Trawls
and
trawling--Environmental
aspects--Grand
Banks
of
Newfoundland;
Benthos--Grand
Banks
of
Newfoundland;
Bivalvia--Grand
Banks
of
Newfoundland
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Biology
Discipline
Biology
Language
eng
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references
Abstract
Otter
trawling
has been the
prevalent
method
of
ground
fishing
in
Atlantic
Canada.
Despite
this
,
little
is
known
about
associated
impacts
to
benthic
habitat
and
communities.
This
thesis
examines
the
impacts
of
otter
trawling
on
bivalves
living
in
sand
, a
bottom
type
occurring
widely
over
the
Grand
Banks.
Bivalves
are
dominant
members
of
sandy
bottoms
on
continental
shelves
and are
good
indicators
of
physical
disturbance.
Two
broad
categories
of
impacts
to
benthos
from
mobile
fishing
gear
are
direct
harvest
and
incidental
damage.
Bivalves
have
low
susceptibility
to
capture
by
groundfish
otter
trawls;
trawl
capture
efficiency
is
on the
order
of
10-5.
In
order
to
investigate
incidental
impacts
, a
three-year
otter
trawling
experiment
was
conducted
on a
fine
to
medium
sand
bottom
on the
northeastern
Grand
Bank.
Each
year
a
total
of
12
trawl
passes
were
made
along
the
centre
line
of
two
13
km
by
200
m
experimental
corridors.
Sampling
was
conducted
inside
experimental
and
adjacent
reference
corridors
with a
0.5
m2
hydraulic
grab.
No
significant
effects
of
trawling
were
detected
on
bivalve
populations
in any
year.
Shallow
burrowing
species
showed
no
significant
changes
in
density
or
biomass
and
recruitment
of
juveniles
<
3
mm
was
apparent
inside
trawled
corridors.
The
size
structure
of
populations
from
trawled
and
reference
areas
were
similar.
Mean
(±
sd)
percent
major
shell
damage
immediately
after
trawling
was
low
,
ranging
from
2.8
±
6.1%
to
13.5
+
9.4%.
Trawl
doors
are the
most
destructive
gear
component
of
otter
trawls.
A
physical
trawl
door
model
was
towed
through
an
artificial
sand
testbed
,
constructed
to
resemble
an
offshore
seabed.
Although
bivalves
within
the
scour
path
were
displaced
,
levels
of
damage
were
low
(c.
5%)
,
similar
to
levels
of
damage
from the
combined
effects
of
all
gear
components
recorded
in the
field
experiment.
The
anomaly
of
displacement
,
accompanied
by
few
instances
of
damage
,
is
explained
by
sediment
mechanics
associated
with
scouring
and
size
and
life
position
of
infaunal
bivalves.
Compared
to
natural
sediment-mediated
disturbances
,
otter
trawling
can
be
manipulated
over
a
wide
range
of
frequencies.
Individual
and
population-level
adaptive
traits
probably
confer
considerable
stability
to
sandy
bottom
bivalve
populations
exposed
to
typical
patterns
of
trawling
activity
on the
Grand
Banks.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1358378
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(37.24
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Gilkinson_Kent.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
98971.cpd