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Topic: Relieving Baratrauma Problems in Deepwater Rockfish  (Read 1702 times)

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Yosemite Rob

  • Sea Lion
  • ****
  • Location: Yosemite
  • Date Registered: Nov 2008
  • Posts: 1393
I am sure most already know but a helpful update  :smt006

(This e-mail is being sent to all DFG employees)
 
California Department of Fish and Game News Release
 
Date: Sept. 8, 2011
 
Contact: Carrie Wilson, Communications Office, [email protected]
 
** Photos and all archived columns:
https://californiaoutdoors.wordpress.com **
 
 
California Outdoors Q&As

Relieving Barotrauma Problems in Deepwater Rockfish
 
Question: Whenever I pull up one of the rockfish species that is not legal to keep, its swim bladder is usually so full of air that even if I throw it back it will still die. What’s the point in throwing them back if they’re just going to die anyway?
 
I’ve heard that pulling the fish slowly up to the surface minimizes the pressure change damage and gives the fish the best chance of survival when thrown back. If the fish is too inflated, we poke it with a needle in its side to relieve the gas pressure and the fish always goes right down again. Is this the best way to get an over-inflated fish back down so it will survive to be caught another day? (Russ J.,
Eureka)
 
Answer: Rockfishes brought up from depth often arrive at the surface with an inflated swim bladder. When released, they are too buoyant and cannot freely swim back down. Even slowing the speed of the retrieve will not increase the likelihood of survival of a released rockfish.
 
According to DFG Associate Marine Biologists Ed Roberts and John Budrick, rockfish take a considerable amount of time to transfer gases from the swim bladder (buoyancy compensating organ) through their blood stream and out through their gills. The rate at which a fish would have to be brought up from depth to alleviate the effects of barotrauma (pressure-related injuries) would be far slower than any angler would be willing to reel. Instead, the best solution is to bring them up as fast as possible to minimize stress on the fish. Then, using a descending device, get the fish back down to the bottom or a minimum of 100 feet within two minutes of arriving at the surface. Mortality rates double for every 10 minutes beyond the first two minutes according the research conducted at California State University Long Beach (Jarvis and Lowe, 2008).
 
A simple release tool consisting of a heavy weight, line and barbless hook can be used to send a fish suffering from barotrauma back down to a depth where the increased pressure will compress the bladder gases that expanded at the surface, and thus allow the fish to swim away. This is a handy piece of tackle that all conservation-minded anglers should consider adding to their tackle boxes. You can make your own release device or purchase a commercially made device at many tackle stores.
 
Another option is an inverted milk-type crate, with a rope attached to the top (what was previously the bottom) and weights at each corner.
This creates a bottomless cage-type contraption which allows the fish to equalize and swim out of the bottom, which happens nearly as soon as the cage reaches the depth where the fish was caught. Research conducted at California State University Long Beach indicates that rockfish from the Southern California Bight returned from a depth of 200 feet to a depth of 350 feet using a cage had an 83 percent survival rate after five days (Jarvis and Lowe, 2008). Similarly, research by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game on yelloweye rockfish caught in waters as deep as 600 feet showed more than 95 percent survival of the fish returned to depth (Hochhalter et al, 2010). The significant decrease in mortality rates from nearly 100 percent of fish released at the surface in depths greater than 180 feet to the vast majority of fish surviving when a descending device is employed is very encouraging. 
 
Anglers can contribute greatly to the recovery of overfished prohibited species and small fishes that would otherwise die by using a descending device. Don’t just let them go, let them grow!
 
One important note: Please do not attempt to vent the expanded gases by puncturing the fish. Many anglers will take a knife or other sharp object and poke a hole in the organ protruding from the mouth. This is the stomach, not the swim bladder! Puncturing the stomach decreases the fish's odds of survival, and may introduce infection-causing microorganisms. Some anglers attempt to deflate the swim bladder by inserting a hypodermic needle into the side of the fish to vent the gas.
This is not recommended. Even if you insert the needle in the correct location, you may end up puncturing an organ like the liver, heart or other structures that will kill the fish. Also, unless you are using a sterile technique, your efforts may result in an infection that kills the fish. If no descending device is available, the fish may be better off floating at the surface rather than suffering a mortal injury or infection from a well-meaning but untrained angler. Just because a punctured fish swims off does not necessarily mean it will survive – it may die later of injuries or infection.
 
As to why specific fish must be released, harvest quotas for overfished species are so small that there is no allowance for directed take.
Allowing anglers to keep fish that are caught incidentally while fishing for other species may result in unethical anglers intentionally targeting these species, thus jeopardizing the plans to rebuild these populations.
 
Bottom line … To increase survival, use descending devices to return the fish to the bottom or a minimum depth of 100 feet within two minutes of being brought to the surface. This method does not carry the risk of infection or injury and greatly reduces mortality relative to leaving fish at the surface to perish due to sun exposure or predation.
 
For more on how to help fish survive barotrauma, please go to www.dfg.ca.gov/marine/groundfishcentral/barotrauma.asp.
 
#  #  #
 
Carrie Wilson is a marine biologist with the California Department of Fish and Game. While she cannot personally answer everyone’s questions, she will select a few to answer each week. Please contact her at [email protected].

Please do not reply to this e-mail; [email protected] is for outgoing messages only and is not checked for incoming mail. For questions about this News Release, contact the individual(s) listed above. Thank you.
formerly Da roblo, Diroblo, white devil, etc..


Blue Jeans

  • Sea Lion
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  • Location: Lodi, CA
  • Date Registered: Dec 2004
  • Posts: 3636

Research conducted at California State University Long Beach indicates that rockfish from the Southern California Bight returned from a depth of 200 feet to a depth of 350 feet using a cage had an 83 percent survival rate after five days (Jarvis and Lowe, 2008). 
 

I am pleased that she cited specific studies.

-Brian G


tallpaul

  • Salmon
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  • Location: Scotts Valley
  • Date Registered: Apr 2005
  • Posts: 444
f I'm fishing iron for rockies and want to "descend" a smaller fish, I do this"

Pass the hook through a tiny bit of flesh somewhere on the head, so it's barely hooked. Drop the fish down to the botton, wait a minute, then load up the rod and swing to pull the hook out. I don't think the added trauma of the torn out hook is a problem, and I hope they recover. Better than leaving them floating, even if it's not as good as a dedicated rig.
Always willing to join others in the Monterey/Santa Cruz/Half Moon Bay area for a bit of fishing...feel free to contact me.