commercial fishing

commercial fishing

Introduction
 the taking of fish and other seafood and resources from oceans, rivers, and lakes for the purpose of marketing them.

      Fishing is one of the oldest employments of humankind. Ancient heaps of discarded mollusk shells (shell mound), some from prehistoric times, have been found in coastal areas throughout the world, including those of China, Japan, Peru, Brazil, Portugal, and Denmark. These mounds, known as kitchen middens (from the Danish køkkenmødding), indicate that marine mollusks were among the early foods of humans.

      Archaeological evidence shows that humans next learned to catch fishes in traps and nets. These ventures were limited at first to the lakes and rivers, but as boats and fishing devices were improved, humans ventured into sheltered coastal areas and river mouths and eventually farther out onto the continental shelves, the relatively shallow ocean plains between the land and the deeper ocean areas. In some shelf areas where seaweed was abundant, this was also incorporated into the diet.

  Fishing technology continued to develop throughout history, employing improved and larger ships, more sophisticated fishing equipment, and various food preservation methods. Commercial fishing is now carried on in all types of waters, in all parts of the world, except where impeded by depth or dangerous currents or prohibited by law. Commercial fishing can be done in a simple manner with small vessels, little technical equipment, and little or no mechanization as in small local, traditional, or artisanal fisheries. It can also be done on a large scale with powerful deep-sea vessels and sophisticated mechanical equipment similar to that of modern industrial enterprises.

 Both plants and animals are taken from the sea. Two types of fish are caught: demersal, living at or near the bottom, although sometimes in mid-water; and pelagic (pelagic zone), living in the open sea near the surface. Cod, haddock, hake, pollock, and all forms of flatfish are common demersal fish. Herring and related species and tuna and their relatives are examples of pelagic fish. Both demersal and pelagic fish can sometimes be found far from coastal regions. Other aquatic animals that may be the object of commercial fishery include, most notably, crustaceans (lobsters, spiny lobsters, crabs, prawns, shrimps, crayfish) and mollusks (oysters, scallops, mussels, snails, squid, octopuses). Certain mammals (whales, porpoises), reptiles (serpents, crocodiles), amphibians (frogs), many types of worms, coelenterates (coral, jellyfish), and sponges are also sought by commercial fishermen. Most of these animals are legally regarded as fish in many countries.

      The most important water plants commercially obtained in seawater and fresh water are algae. Seaweed is harvested in the water or collected on the seashore. Algae play an important ecological role in many countries, not only as human food but also as fodder for cattle, as fertilizer, and as a raw material for certain industries.

      Fisheries (fishery) are classified in part by type of water: fresh water—lake, river, and pond—and salt water—inshore, mid-water, and deep sea. Another classification is based on the object—as in whaling, salmon fishing, and sponge fishing. Sometimes fisheries are classified according to the method of fishing employed: harpooning, seining, trawling, and lining.

      This article discusses organized fishing for profit, with an emphasis on mechanized industrial methods, gear, and vessels. The history and methods of whaling, which is less fishing than the hunting of an aquatic mammal, are discussed separately in the article whaling. For angling, or recreational fishing, see the article fishing. For information on the use and value of fish and marine products as food, see the article nutrition, human (nutrition).

Andres R.F.T. von Brandt Georg A. Borgstrom Philip F. Purrington Ed.

History of commercial fishing
      Food-gathering people first obtained fish and shellfish from the shallow water of lakes and along the seashore, from small ponds remaining in inundation areas, from tidal areas, and from small streams. Some authorities believe that in the earliest times fish were rarely caught because of the inadequacy of fishing gear. Shellfish, however, can be gathered easily by hand, and the prehistoric kitchen middens (shell mound) indicate their importance as a food (food preservation) source.

      In earliest times most foodstuffs were used at once and not stored, but as expanding populations increased food needs, techniques were developed for preserving fish by drying, smoking, salting, and fermentation. It became desirable to catch large quantities, and specialized equipment was devised. Individual fishing was replaced by collective efforts involving larger, more effective gear.

      Fishing equipment and methods improved through the centuries, until bulk fisheries were established in Europe. Herring were caught in huge numbers in northern Europe in the Middle Ages. Cod fishery began on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland even before the Italian explorer John Cabot made his voyage there in 1497. Whaling with large fleets began in the 17th century, both in the Atlantic and in the South Pacific.

      Before mechanization came to the fishing industry toward the end of the 19th century, sailing vessels developed to suit conditions and fisheries in different areas. The Grand Banks schooners were the peak of such developments. Sailing from New England, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland, they fished cod during trips lasting up to six months, salting the catch for export to Europe, Africa, and the Caribbean. Individual fishermen fished from small wooden dories, setting and hauling longlines by hand. Portuguese vessels also sailed annually to the Grand Banks, and a number still operated alongside modern steel vessels into the late 20th century. Smaller cutters and yawls worked around Europe using drift gill nets and setnets. Beam trawls were used extensively in the North Sea and English Channel, particularly for flatfish, being towed downwind under sail and then hauled back to the vessel's side.

      As steam-driven winches came into use, fishing gear increased in size and weight. Steam gradually replaced sail for propulsion in the last quarter of the 19th century. In turn, the internal-combustion engine supplanted steam, although steam trawlers continued operating as late as the 1950s. Smaller craft became motorized in the early 20th century, and the inboard diesel engine became universally adopted—except for the smallest boats, on which gasoline-powered outboard engines remain common.

      Larger catches could be obtained by increasing the number or the size of the fishing gear or both. Simple lines armed with one or a few hooks were replaced by longlines with thousands of hooks. Single small traps were combined into systems of hundreds, and pots were set in large quantities. Nets were greatly enlarged; netmaking machines were invented that produced netting in large sheets. Mechanical netmaking brought replacement of the old local netting fibres (linen and hemp) with cotton and hard fibres. But all natural fibres, especially those of cellulose, begin to rot in time; thus, the introduction after World War II of rot-proof nets made of synthetic fibres represented a major advance. Mechanical netmaking remained unchanged for the most part, though for certain fishing gear the usual knotted netting was replaced by knotless netting.

      In the beginning of the 1950s, mechanization took a great stride forward in purse seining when the power block was invented for hauling the gear. Another important hauling device was a power-driven drum to haul and store seine nets, gill nets, purse seines, and even the large trawl nets. The Japanese introduced drums in longline fishing for tuna. Another important innovation was the stern chute for stern trawlers, a development made possible by cooperation between naval architects and fishing-gear experts, which permitted large-scale mechanization of gear handling.

      An era of rapid technical development in vessel design began with the British factory trawler experiment in the late 1940s, which demonstrated the great advantage of large stern trawlers that processed their catch on board. The idea was quickly developed by countries seeking to fish distant resources, and by the mid-1960s these large vessels (up to 100 metres long) were operated by the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, Japan, Poland, East Germany, and Spain.

      Equivalent development occurred in the exploitation of the huge resources of small pelagic fish, mainly for conversion into fish meal. In the late 1940s small vessels, using hand-operated natural-fibre nets, fed small shore-based canning and fish-meal plants. By the late 1960s, large fleets of 25-metre purse seiners were supplying factory mother ships capable of handling up to 3,000 tons per day.

      Concurrently, developing countries strove to introduce more modern fishing technology in order to boost protein supplies for their populations. Most rely heavily on artisanal fishing, using canoes or small boats with simple gear and often working off of open beaches. The introduction of outboard motors, larger boats, and synthetic nets enabled many countries to increase their catches significantly.

      In the 40 years following World War II, the annual world fishing catch quadrupled. By the early 1970s, though, it had become apparent that such development was not limitless. Several of the largest resources of pelagic fish harvested by purse seiners suffered collapses generally blamed on overfishing. These included the northeast Atlantic herring, the South Atlantic pilchard, and the West African sardine and associated species. Severe declines in catches of stocks fished by fleets of factory trawlers caused such concern that coastal states pressed for protection of the resources off their shores. In 1972 Iceland became the first country to claim an extended fisheries limit of 50 miles (93 kilometres) and, in 1975, 200 miles. Other countries followed suit, and in 1983 the Law of the Sea (Sea, Law of the) established an exclusive economic zone, or EEZ, of 200 miles, inside of which each country had exclusive right to the exploitation of marine life. An immediate result was the exclusion from many areas of high-performance, long-distance foreign fleets, which were replaced by often less-efficient domestic coastal craft. For example, the British fleet of 168 distant-water trawlers disappeared within a few years, to be replaced by a fleet of compact, coastal-type vessels.

      The oil crisis of the 1970s increased fuel costs as much as 400 percent, while fish prices rose by only about 80 percent. This forced many fuel-inefficient vessels, such as many of the U.S. Gulf shrimp trawlers, to tie up or transfer to other fisheries. Resulting development of fuel-efficient vessels, engines, fishing methods, and equipment—including applications of modern sail technology—depended thereafter upon the price of oil.

      With the growing importance of managing fisheries to ensure maximum possible benefit from a particular stock, the work of fisheries scientists increased in importance. From a mainly descriptive science in the 19th century, the field evolved, especially after World War II, to develop sophisticated computer analyses based on mathematical models to predict the optimum yields available from fish populations. (For a history of the whaling industry, see whaling.)

Fishery equipment and facilities

Gear
      An international classification of fishing methods includes 16 categories, depending upon the fishing gear and the manner in which the gear is used: (1) fishing without gear, (2) grappling and wounding gear, (3) stunning, (4) line fishing, (5) trapping, (6) trapping in the air, (7) fishing with bag nets, (8) dredging and trawling, (9) seining, (10) fishing with surrounding nets, (11) driving fish into nets, (12) fishing with lift nets, (13) fishing with falling gear, (14) gillnetting, (15) fishing with entangling nets, and (16) harvesting with machines.

Hand tools (hand tool)
      The simplest and oldest form of fishing, collecting by hand, is still done today by both professionals and nonprofessionals along the shore during ebb tide in shallow water and in deeper water by divers with or without diving suits. Even when small tools such as knives or hoes are used, such collecting is classified as without gear. Diving to collect sponges, pearl oysters, or corals belongs under this classification, as does fishing with hunting animals. The Chinese still use trained otters, and the Japanese sometimes employ cormorants.

      To extend the reach of the human arm, long-handled tools were invented, such as spears, which can be thrust, thrown, or discharged, and clamps, tongs, and raking devices for shellfish harvesting. A special form is the harpoon, composed of a point and a stick joined together by a rope. Such grappling and wounding gear also includes spears, blowpipes, bows and arrows, and rifles and guns, which are used in fish shooting.

      The method called stunning may involve poisoning with toxic plants and special chemicals or mechanical stunning by explosions under water. The most modern practice in this field is to stun the fish by means of an electrical shock.

      In line fishing the fish can be attracted by a natural or artificial bait or lure devised to catch and hold the fish. Generally, the bait is combined with a hook or with a gorge, as is used in France in line fishing for eels. There are handlines, as in pole-and-line fishing for tuna; setlines, such as bottom longlines with hundreds of hooks, used for cod or halibut; drift lines with a single hook and drifting longlines for tuna, shark, and salmon; and troll lines for mackerel and some game fish. Another method of fishing with hooks is done without bait, by raising and lowering arrays of hooks to gig (hook in the body) such large species as cod and sturgeon.

Traps
      Genuine mechanical traps, which close by a mechanism released by the prey, are seldom employed for fishing. Most commercial fishing traps are chambers entered easily by the prey but from which escape is prevented by labyrinths or retarding devices, such as gorges or funnels. Fish traps can be simple hiding places, such as bushes or tubes, into which fish or shrimps swim for shelter but cannot escape later when the device is hauled in. The octopus pot used on the Italian coast and by the fishermen of South and East Asia is an example. Other types include small basketlike or cagelike traps made of wood, netting, wire, or plastic pots and fyke nets (long bag-shaped nets kept open by a series of hoops). Large pound nets, composed of net walls that guide fish through a series of baffles into a catching area, are used in the Mediterranean for tuna, off the western Baltic coast for eels, herring, and other species, and off both coasts of the northern Pacific for salmon. A special class are aerial traps for catching flying fish and shrimps. The fish are stirred up, then caught in the air with the help of special gear called veranda nets (Nestorius). South Sea islanders catch flying fish at night by attracting them with torches.

Nets

Bag nets
      Bag nets are kept vertically open by a frame and held horizontally stretched by the water current. There are small scoop nets that can be pushed and dragged and big stownets, with and without wings, held on stakes or on anchors with or without a vessel. There is also a special winged type with boards or metal plates (called otter boards) that keep it spread open. Stownets, larger than scoop nets and held in place against a current, are used in many rivers and by the Koreans for sea fishing in the strong current off the southwest coast of their country. In this case the stownet is anchored with a vessel.

Dragged nets
      Dragged gear includes dredges, which are used mostly for shellfish and may be operated by hand in shallow waters or towed from large vessels. Another dragged net is the trawl, a large, cone-shaped bag of netting that is dragged along the seabed or towed in mid-water between the seabed and surface. Trawls are the most important fishing gear of the commercial fisheries of northwest Europe and are second only to purse seines in total catch of the world.

Seines
      The seine net has very long wings and towing warps (tow lines), with or without bags for the catch. With purse seines, pelagic fish are surrounded not only from the side but also from underneath, preventing them from escaping by diving downward. Purse seines can be operated by a single boat, with or without auxiliary skiff, or by two vessels. Many sardinelike fishes—herring, tuna, mackerel, cod, and salmon—are commercially fished in this manner.

Drive-in and lift nets
      Another class of fishing methods involves driving the fish into a net or gear. A drive-in net may be one of those already mentioned or may be specially made, such as the dustpan-shaped stationary gear used in some fisheries in South Asia.

      A further fishing method employs lift nets, which are submerged, then raised or hauled upward out of the water to catch the fish or crustaceans above them, often attracted by light or natural bait. This group includes small hand-operated lift nets, such as hoop and blanket nets, as well as large, mechanically and pneumatically operated lift nets. Some of these employ levers, or gallows, and are installed on the beach or on a vessel. The fish wheels used on the Tiber, Rhône, and Columbia rivers can be considered as mechanized lift nets. The most important examples of this fishing method are the stick-held dip nets of the Japanese. In contrast to the lift nets are falling gear, which can be wooden baskets, cover pots, or a variety of nets designed to be cast on fish and crustaceans from above.

Gill and entangling nets
      Gill nets, which catch the fish in their meshes, are mostly used in long rows. As setnets they are anchored or fixed by stakes; as drift nets they drift freely or with a fishing craft. Before the invention of mid-water trawls, drift nets, with surrounding nets, were the principal gear for fishing pelagic fishes.

      Sometimes gill nets do not catch by meshing but by entangling the fish, especially those too large for the mesh size or provided with spines or hard fins. Single-walled tangle nets are widely used to catch sturgeon, salmon, and shellfish, such as the king crab. Some tangle nets are double walled; most are triple walled, such as the trammel nets used especially for flatfish.

Machines
      Harvesting machines include comparatively new types of gear that may separate the fish or shellfish from the water by pumps (pump fishing) or by mechanized dredges, as well as floating machines that dig out mollusks by means of underwater jets and transport them out of the water with the help of conveyor belts.

Andres R.F.T. von Brandt John C. Sainsbury

Vessels
      Until the mid-20th century, fishing boats were largely of local design, with different types found even in adjacent ports. As fishermen started to roam farther afield for their catches, the vessels grew, and with this growth in size came an element of standardization in design. Today, fishing boat design and construction is an international industry, with the different vessel types dictated more by the fishing methods for which they are designed rather than by their port or country of origin.

      The establishment of 200-mile fishing limits (see above History of commercial fishing (commercial fishing)) has altered fishing patterns and, with them, the types of vessels used by many countries. In the United States and Canada, fishing vessels have grown with the introduction of processing or factory trawlers, while the huge fleets of this type of vessel operated by Soviet-bloc countries and Japan have shrunk. In western Europe, compact fishing vessels have been developed with high catching power. The advantage of these smaller vessels is their reduced capital and operating costs.

      Steel is the most common construction material, being used exclusively on larger vessels (above 25 metres). Traditional wood construction is less common because of cost and a lack of suitable timber in many areas. The use of fibreglass is increasing in smaller fishing vessels, and it is now used on vessels of up to 25 metres in length. Ferrocement has been used to a certain extent; it is mainly used in the artisanal fisheries of developing countries because, while its construction is labour intensive, its raw materials are cheap.

      The aim in all fishing-boat development is to improve efficiency by building vessels that have higher catching power, smaller crews, and reduced operating costs. This development must be matched against safety concerns, as commercial fishing is one of the highest risk industries in the world. Several countries have introduced regulations governing the construction and operation of fishing vessels. The International Maritime Organization, convened in 1959 under the auspices of the United Nations, is responsible for devising international regulations covering such aspects of fishing vessel design as construction, stability, safety equipment, and watertight integrity. These regulations are likely to lead to further standardization in design.

      The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has introduced a classification scheme of fishing vessels based primarily on the gear used.

Trawlers (trawler)
      Most trawlers are single-screw vessels with powerful engines and deck machinery for dragging the trawl nets.

Side trawlers
      On this traditional type of trawler, the trawl is launched and recovered from the side of the vessel. The side trawler is characterized by the wheelhouse and superstructure at the stern and a raised forecastle at the bow. The hull lines follow a traditional seaworthy form, with a pronounced deck sheer giving a high bow and stern. The working deck may be covered.

Stern trawlers
      Practically all trawlers built today are stern trawlers, with the trawl launched and recovered over the stern. The vessels are generally designed with the wheelhouse and superstructure forward, often forming part of the raised forecastle. By contrast, the working deck aft is lower, and, on the larger trawlers a ramp is built into the stern up which the trawl is pulled onto the deck. On smaller stern trawlers the trawl is lifted on board by a hoist.

Beam or outrigger trawlers
      With this type of vessel, two beam trawls are towed from booms extending to each side and supported by a central mast. The booms are very strong, as they take the full weight of the trawl being towed. The mast supporting the booms may be located forward, in which case the wheelhouse is located aft as on a side trawler, or they may be amidships with the wheelhouse forward, as on a stern trawler. The former type is widely used for beam trawling in Europe, while the latter is the pattern of most shrimp trawlers. European-style beam trawlers are the most powerful fishing vessels of their size in the world.

Wet-fish trawlers
      This type is distinguished by the way the catch is stored on board. It can be either a side or stern trawler with an insulated hold where the fish are stored “wet,” or fresh, after sorting. Ice used to cool the catch may be loaded at the start of the voyage or produced on board. This type of trawler normally operates on fishing trips lasting less than four days.

Freezer trawlers
      On this type, constituting most large trawlers, the catch is preserved by freezing. On some vessels the catch is gutted and sorted before freezing, but processing is done mainly after the catch is landed.

Factory (factory ship) or processing trawlers
      These are the largest type of fishing vessel. After catching and sorting, the fish is transferred to the processing deck, where it is processed and packaged. It is then frozen and stored in the hold. Many vessels have facilities for extracting oil and for making fish meal from waste products. Factory trawlers accommodate large crews and stay at sea for many weeks. They often support a fleet of smaller trawlers; when they load fish from other vessels rather than catching it themselves, they are called Klondykers.

Seiners
      Seiners range in size from canoes, where the net is hauled by hand, to larger vessels with powerful net-handling equipment. This equipment generally consists of a power block mounted on a crane placed aft of the wheelhouse, as well as winches and drums for hauling and storing the great lengths of net and rope required for seine fishing.

Purse seiners
      In purse seining, the fish shoal is surrounded by the net, which has a rope that seals the bottom of the net to trap the fish. Small fish may be pumped out of the net, or the net can be hauled on board and the fish released for sorting.

      The North American purse seiner is generally laid out with a forward wheelhouse and aft working deck. A characteristic of this vessel is the powerful net block on the end of a long boom supported by the mast and a crow's nest on the mast for spotting fish shoals.

      European purse seiners are generally larger than their North American counterparts, being typically 30 metres in length. They have an aft wheelhouse and the net is hauled at the stern. The herring and mackerel caught by these vessels, needing sensitive handling and storage, are stored in tanks of chilled seawater built amidships in the hull. Thrusters (screws that provide sideways movement) are usually fitted to these vessels to give improved maneuverability when laying and hauling nets.

      Tuna purse seiners are large vessels mainly designed for long-range fishing, although smaller types operate in the Mediterranean. They are similar in design to, but larger than, the North American purse seiner, and they have a sloping stern where a tuna skiff, used for laying the net, is stowed. Several smaller boats are also carried to help with handling the catch and removing unwanted or protected fish from the nets. In addition to a crow's nest for spotting fish shoals, a light helicopter is sometimes carried on a helicopter deck above the forward wheelhouse. Modern tuna vessels store the catch in chilled seawater tanks.

Seine-netters
      These vessels, like the European purse seiner, have the wheelhouse placed aft. Rather than purse seines, they employ nets similar to bottom trawls, which they set on long ropes and then haul in along the bottom like seine nets. Winches and reels on the forward deck haul and stow the ropes, while a power block aft hauls in the net.

Dredgers
      These vessels tend to fish in sheltered and shallow waters for certain types of shellfish. They are similar to beam trawlers, but they may have four booms for towing the dredges. The hulls are often shallow-draft, and hand or mechanical sorting facilities are fitted on deck. They may have forward or aft wheelhouses.

Lift-netters
      These vessels catch fish by lowering nets over the side, switching on powerful lights to attract the fish, and then lifting the net. Their main characteristics are long booms and support masts along the working side of the vessel. Lift-netters are generally low-powered vessels working on short trips.

Gill-netters
      Gill nets are used by all sizes of fishing boat up to 20 metres in length. There is no characteristic style, although this type of vessel often uses a steadying sail to keep heading into the wind. The nets may be set and hauled by hand or by power blocks at deck level.

Potters
      These are generally inshore vessels using pots or traps to catch shellfish. They come in a wide variety of types and sizes, but a typical inshore potter is 10 metres in length. King crab potters working off of the coast of Alaska are up to 30 metres in length; they generally have the wheelhouse forward to leave a clear working deck aft, but smaller vessels can have the wheelhouse at either end. A characteristic of potters is the pot stowage, which is usually a large frame construction aft. Gear is handled with a crane on larger vessels and with a bulwark-mounted pot hauler on smaller vessels.

Liners
      Fishing with lines and hooks is carried out by a wide range of vessels using either manual or mechanical hauling.

Handliners
      These are generally small fishing boats, open or decked, working inshore waters.

Longliners
      These tend to be larger vessels with the hooks and lines attached to a rope that is supported by floats or simply trailed. Usually there is an automatic line system whereby the hooks are baited and fish removed mechanically in what can be a continuous system. As line-caught fish tend to be of the best quality, chilled seawater tanks are often installed to maintain freshness. The largest types of longliner are those fishing for tuna; these can be more than 60 metres in length.

Pole-and-line vessels
      These vessels use lines mounted on poles or fishing rods, hand operated on smaller vessels and mechanized on larger vessels. A large crew is required, and, typically, the vessels are built with the entire deck edge clear to give the maximum fishing area. The wheelhouse can be forward or aft.

Trollers
      On trollers the lines are trailed aft from twin booms. These vessels are similar to beam trawlers, but they have much lighter gear and almost invariably have the wheelhouse forward so that the lines can be hauled in on the working deck aft.

Multipurpose fishing boats
      Because fishing for certain species of fish is often seasonal, many modern fishing boats are designed to incorporate two or more different fishing methods. Typical is the trawler/purse seiner, but potting vessels and longliners can also be equipped for trawling. Trawlers can also work at pair trawling, in which a trawl is pulled between two vessels. This may require heavier gear to handle the larger trawl.

Artisanal fishing boats
      These are generally used in less-developed countries, working off of an open beach and using very basic fishing methods with no mechanization. Sails and oars are often used as motive power, but under government aid programs there have been advances in design, and engines—mainly outboard motors—are becoming common. Many of the advanced designs retain traditional characteristics to make them acceptable to the fishermen.

Mother ships
      This category generally covers vessels carrying small fishing boats that return to the mother ship with their catch. They are generally ocean-going vessels with extensive on-board facilities for processing and freezing the catch. The category can also include factory trawlers supporting a fleet of smaller catching vessels that are not carried on board.

Support and ancillary vessels
      Large fishing fleets may be provided with support from rescue and hospital ships so that they are fully self-sufficient. Fishery protection vessels also may incorporate similar facilities, although their primary role is the enforcement of fishing rules and regulations—particularly those relating to fishery limits. These vessels are usually armed in order to ensure compliance with their requests and are often naval vessels. Training vessels and fishery research vessels are usually equipped for different fishing methods, but they have additional facilities to meet their particular functions.

Freshwater fishing boats
      Most of these use net and line methods rather than trawls and are therefore lighter in construction than their seagoing counterparts. They are generally small and often use unique fishing methods developed to suit local conditions.

Dag Pike

Harbours (harbours and sea works) and port markets
      The purpose of a fishing harbour is to provide safety for boats, to transfer the fish rapidly to the market or consumer, and to speed the vessels' landing, maintenance, and departure. Facilities for unloading, sorting, and weighing, market halls, merchants' buildings, ice plants, refrigerated storage, and processing plants may be needed depending upon the type of fish product being handled. For vessel repair, a shipyard or slipway is necessary, with engine and electronics shops, net loft, chandlers, and victualers. Fuel may be supplied from floating or shoreside stations, and fresh water is needed for drinking, cleaning, and processing. Electric power, road and rail access, and good communications facilities are important, together with waste disposal arrangements to prevent harbour pollution.

      In its simplest form, a fishing harbour may be a stretch of open beach or a landing site in a rocky coastline, from which canoes or small boats are launched and retrieved manually or with a simple winch. The catch may be sold directly to consumers from the boat or to middlemen who distribute the fish within a wider area. Facilities may include simple storage sheds for nets, outboard motors, fuel, and other supplies. A much more expensive alternative is a pier constructed beyond the surf zone, where boats are lifted out of the water by crane and stored on the deck.

      Larger, heavier boats with inboard engines require sheltered anchorages or moorings, since they must remain afloat. In sheltered coves or inlets a simple rock jetty or wood wharf may be sufficient, with storage, fish handling, and service facilities nearby. If a sheltered site is not available or has insufficient water depth or area, it is necessary to construct protective breakwaters to form an artificial harbour within which the necessary quays, slipways, support, and fish-handling facilities are built.

      Larger harbours serving many bigger vessels may be planned and built by government bodies that operate the facility themselves or lease it to a port authority or company. Often, service facilities such as net lofts, slipways, engine and electronics dealers, and supply stores are provided by small entrepreneurs or private companies.

      Fish-handling and processing facilities may include individual stalls selling fresh fish, auction halls where wholesalers purchase their supplies, or processing plants with freezing facilities producing sophisticated consumer packs from raw fish landed at the docks.

      Most harbours are communal in use, serving a wide range of vessel owners, merchants, and processors. However, large companies with considerable fleets often construct private integrated facilities that include processing, maintenance, and service operations. This is especially the case in developing countries, where only small-scale landing facilities may exist.

John C. Sainsbury

Types of fishery

Salt water
      Fishing in salt water ranges from small, traditional operations involving one person and a rowboat to huge private or government enterprises with large fleets for deep-sea and distant fisheries.

      The Law of the Sea (Sea, Law of the) extended from 12 to 200 miles an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) within which a coastal country has control over fisheries and their exploitation. This effectively restricts most fishing operations on the continental shelves to national vessels or to craft licensed by that country. Within the EEZ, fresh water and coastal waters are often demarcated by law, with fishing within, for example, three miles of the coast allocated only to small-scale, non-trawling fishermen and larger industrial vessels required to remain farther offshore. Small-scale fishermen are usually not restricted to the three-mile zone, and they often may be found well offshore or along the coast from their home ports as they follow the fish. For example, West African canoe fishermen traditionally migrate hundreds of miles coastwise in open canoes, frequently fishing out of sight of land.

Andres R.F.T. von Brandt John C. Sainsbury

The oceans (ocean)
      The oceans constitute the largest factories of living organic matter on Earth, in both magnitude and total productive biomass. Average organic production per acre is identical to that on land, although productivity varies greatly from one area to another, ranging from luxuriance to almost barren deserts. Production in any specific area varies with the seasons and is subject to large and sporadic fluctuations.

      The primary production area of the oceans is the photic zone, the relatively thin surface layer, 25 fathoms (50 metres) deep, that can be penetrated by light, allowing the process of photosynthesis, the use of energy derived from sunlight in the manufacture of food, to take place. All marine life is directly or indirectly tied to the photic zone, on which both recycling and decomposition, also in other spheres of the ocean, depend. Those few microorganisms deriving their energy from sources other than light have relatively little significance in the overall productive balance of the oceans.

      In the photic zone, growth rate depends on light intensity and available nutrients. Nutrients are constantly depleted by the slow sinking toward the bottom of dead plankton, the floating and mainly miniature plant and animal life, which forms the primary link in the ocean food chain. Simultaneously, fertility is constantly restored as the nutrient-rich deeper waters are brought to the surface. The ocean is ploughed by the action of winds (wind) drifting surface waters away from coastal areas, by nutrient-rich waters welling up from the depths, and during the winter season of the temperate regions by cooled surface waters becoming heavier and sinking downward, forcing nutrient-rich waters to rise.

      As a rule tropical surface waters do not interchange with the mineral-supplying waters below as much as those of colder regions and are therefore less productive. However, under certain conditions in some regions of the tropics and subtropics, currents and winds induce a sustained upwelling of mineral nutrition from lower strata, producing spectacular results. Such regions include the waters around the west coasts of southern Africa and South America. Consideration of such conditions demonstrates that the production of fish-supporting plankton is not related to latitude but depends upon the presence of “new water” high in nutrient salts.

      The marine food chains (food chain), ranging from minute floating phytoplankton, sometimes called the “grass” of the sea, to the large predatory species, have many more links than terrestrial equivalents. Each transfer of food value from a lower to a higher level involves a considerable loss in the amount of recoverable organic matter, and consequently of food, so that the amount of organic matter is much greater at the plankton level than it is in fishes. The daily production of dry organic matter in kilograms per square metre beneath the surface of the English Channel is as follows: phytoplankton (plant life) 4–5; zooplankton (animal life) 1.5; pelagic fish (living near the surface) 0.0016; bottom fish 0.0010.

      The plankton eaters, although they tend generally to be small in size, include the basking and whale sharks, the largest of all fishes. Typical consumers of marine plankton include such species as herring, menhaden, sardines, and pilchards. Because of this plentiful food source, these fish exist in tremendous numbers, forming the basis of important fisheries.

      Demersal fishes, including such species as haddock and halibut, live primarily near the ocean floor, where they feed on various invertebrate marine animals. Most of the large fish, such as tuna, swordfish, and salmon, feed on smaller fishes.

Objects of sea fishery

      Small, schooling pelagic species are the most abundant fish in the near surface waters of the seas. Pilchards (pilchard), capelin, herring, sardines, anchovies (anchovy), menhaden, and small mackerels make up more than one-quarter of all saltwater landings. These fishes travel in immense schools several miles long and wide, containing thousands of millions of individuals. Herring feed on small marine animals and other plankton; in turn, such predators as cod, mackerel, tuna, and sharks, as well as certain kinds of whales and birds, eat freely from the enormous schools. Actual landings of each species tend to follow cycles as a result of fluctuations in the size of the resources owing to natural environmental changes and fishing pressures. Most of the catch is directed to production of fish meal and oil.

      The codfishes (cod), including cod, hake, haddock, whiting, pollock, and saithe, share with herring the leading place among edible marine fish. Alaska pollock is the most important, particularly for Russia and Japan. Atlantic cod is an important food fish in both Europe and North America.

       salmon are anadromous, migrating to ocean waters for growth and returning to fresh water for spawning. Pacific salmon return to the freshwater rivers once, to spawn and die; the Atlantic salmon make several returns. Industrial pollution, silting, and damming of rivers for hydroelectric power have seriously threatened the salmon. Only through such large-scale management measures as bypass streams and hatcheries has it been possible to save the Pacific salmon; similar measures with respect to the Atlantic salmon have been less successful.

      Flatfish include a great many species, such as plaice, halibut, and sole, living largely at the bottom of the coastal shelves. The stock of each species is quite limited, however, and halibut was one of the first species for which catch quotas were established.

      A major change in ocean fishery since World War II is the intense exploitation of redfish, also called ocean perch. Jack mackerel, one of the earliest fishes used for human food, continues as an important food source. Although it lives in midocean, the catch has increased.

      The true tuna fishes include albacore, bluefin, bigeye, yellowfin tuna, bonito, and skipjack. These species represent a significant marine source of human food, hunted since ancient days. Both Atlantic and Pacific stocks have been heavily fished since the end of World War II, and signs of excessive harvest have appeared. More than half the global catch is canned or frozen for the U.S. market. Spanish mackerels and swordfish belong in this group but, despite efforts toward increasing the catches, both remain minor items.

      There are some 250 species of shark. Like the whale, sharks have a broad range of feeding habits. Although many are predators, some, including two of the largest fishes in the oceans, the basking shark of the northern temperate zone and the whale shark of tropical waters, are plankton feeders. Shark meat is commonly eaten in warm latitudes but elsewhere is little esteemed, except for the fins, high in protein and considered a delicacy, which are frequently used in soups.

      Since World War II, many new fish species have been exploited. The clearest indication of this is the doubling of the catches of nonidentified fishes, a category that equals the volume of codfishes.

      The term shellfish is generally applied to all invertebrate marine organisms having visible shells. They may be broadly categorized as crustaceans (crustacean) and mollusks.

      The crustaceans include lobsters, crabs, crayfish, and both shrimp and the closely related but larger prawns. The shells consist mainly of a hard, inedible substance called chitin. Crustaceans molt frequently during growth. Blue crabs are eaten when molting and soft-shelled. Marine lobsters are eaten when about five years old and have by then molted about 25 times.

      With the development of satisfactory freezing techniques in the 1940s, shrimping expanded considerably, becoming a global operation. The United States is a major consumer, importing shrimp, mainly frozen, from more than 60 countries. South Africa and Australia have developed a worldwide market for rock lobster, and Japan and Russia dominate the world market for king crab.

      The major mollusks consumed as food are oysters, mussels, clams, scallops, whelks, and snails. The best-known marine snail is the abalone, encountered in many warm waters. This group also includes the octopus, squid, and cuttlefish, popular seafoods in Mediterranean countries and the Far East.

      Sea cucumbers (sea cucumber) (holothurians), or sea slugs (opisthobranch), are usually marketed under the name of trepang or bêche-de-mer. Rich in protein, they are eaten in China, Southeast Asia, Australia, and Italy.

Mammals
      Ocean mammals include such cetaceans (cetacean) as whales (whale), porpoises, and dolphins (dolphin), as well as seals and walruses. Whales are a source of meat, fats, and oils, hormones such as insulin, and chemicals. They exist at all levels of ocean food chains. The blue whale mainly devours small reddish shrimp called krill, while the formidable killer whale feeds on salmon, seals, and sharks. The number of species, although still large, has declined considerably. See the article whaling.

      The hunting of porpoises and dolphins preceded whaling in history. Dolphins were eaten in ancient times around the Mediterranean, and Xenophon and his Greek army found sizable stores of salted dolphin meat in earthenware vessels on the Black Sea coast. Their use as food there continued until banned by the Soviet Union in the interest of preserving the animals for biologic research. Many tropical islanders still hunt dolphin on a large scale. Freshwater dolphins are caught in many of the world's great rivers, including the Ganges, Indus, and Brahmaputra, the Amazon, and the Río de la Plata. The dolphins of Chinese rivers have been eradicated, but a number survive in the lake regions of the upper Yangtze.

Seaweeds and plankton
      Marine plants may be divided into two groups: grasses and algae. There is only one subaquatic grass of any significance, namely eelgrass. Algae that grow in a fixed location, generally called seaweeds (seaweed), may be categorized according to colour, into green, brown, red, or blue-green. Brown algae, sometimes called kelp, may grow to exceptional sizes; some specimens attain a length of 50 metres or more.

      Seaweeds are heavily exploited in many parts of the globe for human as well as animal food. Several species are extensively cultivated on the coastal shelves of China, Japan, the Philippines, and elsewhere. Brown species in particular are harvested in Japan and made into a number of food products. Several are used as material for various thickening agents.

      Cultivated red seaweeds belong to the genus Porphyra. Their sun-dried, blackish fronds are shaped into sheets and used in the Orient as a wrapping for rice. Harvested along the coasts of Ireland and Scotland, red seaweed is made into a powder and used as the main ingredient of a kind of bread called laver. Seaweeds contribute to the diet accessory nutrients such as vitamins B6 and B12.

      Phytoplankton does not offer man a suitable food and can hardly be used even as feed for animals. Many species are toxic; the rest are scarcely digestible. In addition, most plankton finish their life cycle within a few days or weeks and are usually devoured by predators. Consequently, the amount of plankton in the water at any given moment is small, even though total plankton production over a year may, in a particular water, well exceed that of fish. Plankton harvesting is therefore very difficult, because of the volume of water that must be sieved, but several attempts to develop a feasible harvesting device have been undertaken. The Japanese, Burmese, and East Indians have managed to develop profitable fisheries for certain tiny shrimp that feed on plankton. The shrimp are dried or fermented into pastes. Elsewhere similar plankton-fed shrimp are sun dried and sold as a snack.

      Unicellular green algae, such as Chlorella and Scenedesmus, have been artificially cultivated, yielding 75 tons per hectare (30 tons per acre) per year, compared with the standard wheat yield of 2.5 to 3.7 tons. However, the process is costly, since algae, in addition to harvesting, require decolorization and special processing to remove or break down the cell walls through drying and enzyme action in order to become digestible. It is far more efficient to use such plankton directly as fish feed in cultivation ponds or in the raising of cattle and poultry. Blue-green algae easily create waterblooms, slimy accumulations that may be dried in the sun and molded into small loaves with a nutlike flavour and high in protein. This food is extracted from Lake Chad in tropical Africa, and the Aztecs made a similar product. In China a scum called lan, collected from ponds and freshwater lakes, provides sustenance for large numbers of people. A related scum, keklap, found in Java, is used chiefly as fish feed. Another species is made into dried sheets in Japan and prepared for food by heating in water. Successful cultivation of some blue-green species has been carried through on a semicommercial scale.

Georg A. Borgstrom John C. Sainsbury

Fish finding
      Traditionally, sea fishermen have known the time and place to find their catch, but the history of fishing has demonstrated more than once that even old and rich fishing places can become exhausted quite suddenly. This is especially true with pelagic fish like herring, pilchards, or sardines. The herring yields of the Schonen fishery and later on of the Bohuslaine fishery (1744–1809) in the Baltic Sea fell so severely that the very existence of the Hanseatic League was compromised. This sudden change did not result from overfishing but was caused instead by natural fluctuations in the development of stocks. In modern times, sardine fishing collapsed off the California coast in 1952, followed by the Peruvian anchovy fishery 20 years later. Similar disasters have occurred in other parts of the world not only because of overfishing but also for natural reasons. When this happens new fishing places must be found. It is difficult to explain how good fishing places in great depths were found in ancient times, but fish in shallow waters, fjords, or small bays can easily be seen. On the high seas, fish can be located when they surface temporarily, and fish searching by direct observation from a vessel is important even today. Airplanes and helicopters are commonly used in purse seine fishing. An experienced air-spotting pilot can detect fish under the surface and identify species by observing the shoal's form or colour or behaviour and sometimes by the presence of accompanying birds. During the night, fishes can be located through the phenomenon of bioluminescence; (bioluminescence) i.e., when their passage through the water causes tiny marine organisms to luminesce. Accompanying birds have played an important part in fish searching for centuries, because a concentration of birds can be seen from a distance. Very often the birds are not attracted by the fish sought but by smaller fishes and squid, which may have taken refuge from large species by swimming to the surface. Other animals may also indicate fish concentrations by their presence. Porpoises (porpoise), for example, are known companions of tuna, and tuna purse seiners often set their nets where porpoises have been seen. To find fish in deeper waters by other means was difficult if not impossible in the past. Herring fishermen used signal lines to find their prey in deep waters. These were long wires dropped from a boat; the fisherman holding the line in his hand could feel the vibration caused by the fish touching the line, which was named the herring's telephone. Other fish were also found by signal lines, often tied with fishing gear. In modern industrial fisheries, experiments have been made with direct listening for fish, but this method has been found impractical. Sea fishermen have also learned to judge where fish can be expected by observing environmental conditions. The colour of the water and the presence of current or of a borderline between different water bodies are some common fish indicators. One of the most important physical properties for fish finding is the temperature of the water. The use of thermometers was one of the first practices fishermen learned from oceanographers, not only for fish finding but also for forecasting availability of the desired species. Aerial and satellite surveys of these properties are becoming of increasing importance.

      The first experiments using electrically generated sound pulses and their echoes to locate fish were undertaken in Britain during the 1930s, and by the 1950s fish-finding echo sounders (depth finder) had become an essential aid to catching. As these units worked vertically, they only showed fish immediately below the vessel, so that a logical development was the application of sonar in order to search horizontally around the boat. For many years the machines provided only a “black on white” paper display of the resulting echoes, and interpretation of the displays was dependent upon the skill of the skipper. Gradually, improvements were made in the quality and quantity of information displayed, enabling monochrome signals to be displayed on a television-type screen. A big breakthrough came with the advent of microprocessor technology, which made it possible for fish-finding sonars (sonar) and sounders to rapidly analyze the signals that their high performance transducers picked up from the sea. Information regarding size, abundance, and movement of the fish is now displayed in many colours, provides the skipper with a wide range of scales, and enables him to focus on and expand information at a particular depth or location.

      Other instruments have become vital to fishing operations, especially radio- and satellite-transmitted position-fixing equipment such as Decca Navigator, loran, and Satnav. These enable a skipper to return to the precise position where fish are spotted or to a particular location such as a coral reef or where gear has been set. Microprocessor technology allows information from various instruments such as sonar, radar, Satnav, and Loran to be fed into a single television screen that provides the skipper with information processed to suit his needs. The vessel's movements, shown on the screen, can be integrated with navigation and fishing charts fed into the display from computer memory banks. By linking these instruments to the control of winches, engines, and rudder, fully computerized fishing operations are possible.

Sea-fishing methods

Pole-and-line fishing
      Line fishing at sea is very popular, not only in traditional fisheries with small boats employing a limited number of hooks but also in industrial operations with large vessels or fleets using thousands of hooks.

      Pole-and-line methods are used in tropical Pacific and Atlantic waters to catch young bluefin and yellowfin tuna, and smaller tuna species—such as albacore, skipjack, bonito, and little tunny. The pole, generally bamboo, ranges in length from two to 10 metres, with a line of roughly the same length. Hooks of various sizes are barbless to facilitate baiting and removing the captured fish. To hold onto the pole a “rod rest” is generally used, which is made of canvas, leather, or old rubber tires. Depending on the size of the vessel, the crew may number 30 or more. A large crew is needed, since fishing time may be limited and the maximum possible number of rods must be worked. If larger and heavier fishes are sought, two, three, or even four poles may be linked to a single hook. In this case the fishermen must cooperate closely. Also used successfully are deck- and rail-mounted automated fishing poles operated hydraulically and electrically. The fibreglass rods are mechanically moved up and down, swinging the hooked fish onto the deck and removing the hook before swinging it, unbaited, back overboard.

      The tuna is attracted and kept near the vessel by chumming, throwing live bait overboard. The bait is kept alive on board in special tanks in which seawater circulates constantly. Bait can be an expensive problem for tuna fishermen; to catch one ton of tuna, roughly 100 kilograms of live bait fish are needed. Sometimes the hooks are baited, sometimes artificial lures are used with hooks hidden in feathers. When the tuna is “hot” (very eager to take the bait), a naked hook is sufficient. Water spraying helps to attract the tuna; it also serves to camouflage the shadows of boat and crew.

      Pole-and-line fishing for tuna is done in daytime from slow-moving vessels. Since considerable space is needed for the angling crew to stand side by side on the lee side of the vessel, Japanese vessels for pole-and-line fishing have a long extended bow. To simplify hauling in the catch these boats also have a low freeboard (i.e., their sides ride low above the water). American tuna vessels hang special crew racks outside the ship over the water.

Drifting longlines
      Used for tuna—especially in Japan, Taiwan, and Korea and to a limited extent in South Africa, Cuba, and Oceania—drifting longlines are particularly successful in the tropical Atlantic for big fish in depths from 60 to 250 metres. More than half the fish caught in this manner are yellowfin tuna, one-third are albacores, and the remainder bigeye and bluefin tuna. Sharks, marlins, swordfish, and sailfish, also caught with drifting longlines, are sometimes included in the tuna statistics. Sharks can cause serious losses by attacking hooked tuna. Originally longlining for tuna was a Japanese inshore fishery. At the end of the 19th century, the Japanese were fishing 50 to 65 kilometres off their coasts. This fishery was extended when sailing boats were replaced by motorized craft, and by 1926 the Japanese began longlining for tuna off Taiwan, by 1929 in the Indian Ocean, by 1930 in the South Pacific, by 1938 in the eastern Pacific, by 1952 off the southeastern coast of Australia, and since 1955 in the Atlantic. A longlining crew must be willing to do a hard, though lucrative, job and remain far from home for long periods. The gear is a line composed of 400 to 450 sections, each section with a length of 150 to 400 metres stored in a basket. The total line can have a stretched length of up to 180 kilometres. Each section is composed of subsections of different length. The branch lines with the hooks are composed of three sections that vary in number and length. From one to 12 (generally five) branch lines with hooks form one section; 2,000 hooks are considered the greatest number that can be operated in one set by a vessel. With decreasing catches, attempts have been made to increase the number of hooks; Korean fishermen are said to operate as many as 3,000. The shooting of the line from the stern of the vessel begins early in the morning before sunrise, when the vessel is moving at a speed of about five knots (five nautical miles per hour) or more. During shooting the lines have been tied together and the hooks are baited with frozen Japanese sauries. Each section is tied with a float line and a buoy. Depth of the gear can be regulated by the length of the float lines and the distance of the floats. Ten to 14 men require four hours to perform the task. Hauling from the forepart of the vessel begins in the early afternoon with the help of a line hauler. Depending on the quantity of the catch, hauling can take more than 10 hours with a crew of eight to 10. With preparing and sorting the catch, the usual working day of a crew member totals some 18 hours. Because of this and the fact that vessels stay at sea more than 200 days per year, the Japanese and Taiwanese have experienced difficulty in procuring crews; this problem has led to the development of new technology to simplify the work and reduce manpower. One such improvement is the reel system, made especially for larger vessels. The total line is set, hauled, and stored on a drum, and the floats and branch lines are stowed on separate reels and clipped on or removed as the main line is set or hauled. Research is being done on a coupling apparatus to do this automatically. Another invention is a line-winder system practicable for small vessels. In this a single line is used, hauled and coiled by a line winder in special tanks in the aft part of the vessel.

Bottom longlines
      For centuries, line fishing for demersal fishes was carried on in coastal waters and far at sea in the dory fishery famous today. A sailing mother ship carried the dories from Portugal, France, Canada, and the United States to the Grand Banks for cod. The one-man dory operated near the carrier setting longlines and sometimes fishing with handlines. In the evening the catch was carried back to the mother ship where each man prepared his catch for salting. Some large-scale modern enterprises also fish with bottom longlines, catching many species of the cod family, including cod, haddock, coral fish, hake, and pollock, as well as rays, and many flatfish, such as halibut. There are also longline fisheries for groupers, hairtails, croakers, and sea breams. Bottom lines are not as long as the more easily controlled drift lines. The hooks do not always lie on the bottom but may hang above it to protect the bait against unwanted bottom predators, such as starfish, snails, or crabs. Typically, bottom lines are used for halibut in the northern Pacific. A relatively heavy main line is divided into sections of approximately 90 metres. The branch lines, each about 1.5 metres long, are tied at intervals of four to 5.5 metres. Modern synthetics, with their greater strength and lighter weight, have replaced natural fibres for main lines. Fishing depth usually ranges between 80 and 270 metres, depending on the grounds and season. The setline is anchored on both ends, marked by a floating keg and a lighted flag buoy at night.

      An automated longline system developed in Norway baits hooks when setting, then cleans and stows them on magazine racks when hauling. This, and a number of similar systems, has enabled more hooks to be set by smaller crews and has thereby revolutionized the bottom longline fisheries of Europe and North America.

Traps
      There are only a few areas in the world where water or weather conditions prohibit the use of traps. A single small vessel can operate hundreds of traps, though lack of storage space may cause difficulties. Thus collapsible traps of netting on a wire framework are often preferred not only for fish but also for crustaceans. Many plastic traps are made, especially for lobster. Some can be dismantled for easy transportation. Water snails, such as whelk in England and other species in Korea, are also trapped, as are cuttlefish and octopuses. As in fresh water, fyke nets can be set in long rows or in connected systems. Commercial sea fisheries set long rows of pots or framework traps by the longline system; i.e., single pots are tied with a branch line to a main line. Hauling is accomplished with small hand-operated or motor-driven winches. More important for catching fish in commercial sea fisheries are the big wooden corrals, or weirs, and the large pound nets. The oldest type may be the Italian tonnara, used in the Mediterranean for tuna from the Bosporus to the Atlantic. Very large pound nets are also used by the Japanese on the Pacific coast, by the Danes and their neighbours off the eastern coasts of the Baltic, and for salmon fishing off the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of North America. The difficulty in setting large traps lies in placing them on the bottom. If the water is not deep and the bottom is not hard, the weirs can be held by sticks or piles. Where the water is deeper and the ground is hard or rocky, the weirs must be anchored.

Dragged gear
      Dredges and trawls are of great importance in commercial sea fisheries. Dredges are generally used in shallow water by small vessels, although a deep-sea dredge is operated by research vessels at depths of up to 1,000 metres. The simplest dredges in sea fishery are hand operated. Fitted with a stick up to five metres long, they resemble rakes combined with a bag for collecting the catch—usually mollusks or crustaceans. Heavier dredges with a triangular or quadrangular iron frame may be towed along the seafloor by small vessels or pulled some distance from the shore or from an anchored vessel and then towed back with a winch. For digging out mollusks, some dredges have iron teeth on the lower edge of the frame. They may also have a pressure plate on the upper part and chains on the lower part, depending on the catch sought. The bag of the dredge is made of wire rings that have good resistance to friction and of hard fibre netting. Usually more than one dredge is operated by a vessel, and they are towed with the help of outriggers. The great disadvantage of dredging is that much of the catch is damaged, wasting effort and needlessly killing fish.

      Trawling in sea fishery can be done by small vessels or even rowboats (as in the estuary of the Tagus River near Lisbon). More important, however, are fleets of highly mechanized trawlers whose gross registered tonnage may reach 5,000 and whose horsepower approaches 6,000. The trawl is a towed net bag with a wide opening at the mouth and an end closed by a special knot. The mesh size of the opening can be large—600 millimetres (two feet) from knot to knot—to diminish water resistance during towing. The closed end (called the cod end) can have meshes of six millimetres, depending upon the species of fish or shrimp sought. The trawl is designed in a smooth funnellike shape to guide the fish into the cod end. To keep the mouth of the trawl open, a large horizontal beam may be used. The beam can measure up to 12 metres in length and is based on two guides that glide over the bottom. The Dutch catch flatfish with beam trawls that have heavy chains, called tickler chains, dragging on the seafloor in front of the net opening between the two gliders to frighten the fish from the bottom into the trawl. Additional stimulus is often provided by electrifying the tickler chains.

      Though beam trawls were the original gear of deep-sea steam trawlers, today they are used by smaller vessels only. Beam trawls are usually towed in pairs, one on each side of the vessel. Such an arrangement can considerably decrease the stability of the vessel and is dangerous except in craft specially designed for the purpose. Another method involves two vessels stretching the horizontal opening of the trawl between them. Two vessels have more power to tow a bigger trawl at greater speed, but the skippers of the two vessels must cooperate very closely. The most important method for spreading a trawl opening employs two trawl doors, or otter boards, rectangular or oval plates that are attached to each side of the net and caused to flare apart by the pressure of the water.

      Mid-water trawling involves dragging the trawl with one or two vessels in the area between the ocean bottom and its surface to catch pelagic fish. The trawl is set at the depth where fish have been observed by varying the length of the towing warps and the speed of the towing vessel. With longer warps and lower speed, the trawl sinks; it rises with shorter warps and higher speed. The depth of the trawl is monitored by a special transducer called a netsonde, which is mounted on the trawl and transmits echograms showing the position of the net in relation to the bottom and to the school of fish.

      A special type of mid-water trawl is the semipelagic trawl, originally invented in Iceland and now operated primarily by French fishermen. In this technique the otter boards remain in touch with the bottom but the trawl floats at some distance above it. Semipelagic trawls were constructed because fish often are concentrated at a short distance from the bottom outside the range of the usual bottom trawl, which has a low, wide opening. To overcome this difficulty, a higher opening of the trawl is needed. Though the opening of a bottom trawl can be stretched vertically by various means, such stretching decreases the horizontal width of opening. Some modern bottom trawls are constructed with a high vertical and horizontal opening, and many consider them the best available gear for bottom trawling.

Seine nets (Nestorius)
      Seine nets are often employed in beach seining, where fish shoals are near beaches. Large beach-seining operations for sardinelike fishes and other species are carried on in the Indian Ocean. The importance of this method has decreased as pollution has cut the available stocks of fish in this region and as manpower costs have risen: not all fishing methods lend themselves to mechanization. More successful are anchor seines, better known (because of their origin in Denmark in 1849) as Danish seines. The gear consists of a net similar to a trawl but with a large bag and long wings connected to long towing ropes. One of the ropes (up to 1,000 metres long) is tied to an anchored buoy. The other rope is tied to the vessel, which steams in a wide circle, laying the ropes and returning to the buoy. The ropes act to keep the net open and herd the fish toward the bag. The vessel then hauls both ropes together until the net bag is taken on board. This method is used in northern Europe for flatfish and cod and in Japan has become the most important method of inshore fishery for bottom fish, after two-boat trawling.

Purse seines and lamparas
      The most important sea-fishing gear is the surrounding net, represented by the older lampara nets and the more modern purse seines. Both are typical gear for pelagic fish schooling in large and dense shoals. When these nets are used, a shoal of fish is first surrounded with a curtain or wall of netting that is buoyed at the surface and weighted at the bottom. The lampara net has a large central bunt, or bagging portion, and short wings. The buoyed float line is longer than the weighted lead line, so that, as the lines are hauled, the wings of the net come together at the bottom first, trapping the fish. As the net is brought in, the school of fish is worked into the bunt and captured. With the purse seine, once the school is surrounded, the bottom of the net is closed by drawing a line through rings attached to the lead line. This pulls the net shut at the bottom like a purse, and when the net is hauled in, the concentrated fish are removed by a brail (dip net) or are pumped aboard the fishing vessel.

      Surrounding nets are used for tuna, herring, sardines and related species, salmon, mackerels, and even cod (when they come to spawn in the pelagic zone). For these nets to be successful, the fish must be in large and dense shoals; light and bait are sometimes used as lures to produce such shoaling.

Lift nets
      Fish can also be caught, in limited quantities, by lift nets: stationary types operated along the shoreline, movable ones from rafts and boats, and large blanket nets held on each corner by a small boat. The Soviets operate a large commercial lift-net fishery on the Caspian Sea to catch sardinelike fish attracted by light. Each vessel operates two conical nets, setting one while the other is being lifted. Another effective lift net is the large, boxlike basnig of the Philippines, operated with a luring light during the night beneath a single outrigged vessel; sardines, mackerels, hairtails, squid, and other pelagic prey are caught. The Japanese have a special kind of lift net for sauries; the fish, attracted by light, swim over the netting lowered into the water and are caught when the netting is hauled.

Gill nets and drift nets
      Quite important in commercial sea fisheries, gill nets are sometimes operated in large sets thousands of metres long. These generally drift with the vessel or are set as anchored nets in long rows at or near the bottom of the sea. Gill nets are used for many pelagic fishes, such as herring, pilchards, sardines and related species, mackerels, croakers, salmon, and tuna. They also are used for many bottom fishes—cod, Alaska pollock, and others. For cod, Icelandic fishermen set up to 90 nets, each about 50 metres in length, in depths up to 180 metres.

      Drift nets are widely used to catch pelagic sea fishes. In northern Europe, before the introduction of trawling, drift nets were the most important method of deep-sea fishery. In the old herring fishery of northwestern Europe, drifters commonly set more than 100 nets, each about 30 metres in length. Thus a fleet of drift nets might measure three or even four kilometres. The nets are set in the late afternoon to catch the herring as they ascend in the evening from ocean bottom to higher water levels. During the night the vessel drifts with the nets like a buoy. Hauling, done by hand or with mechanical aids, begins at midnight and, when big catches are taken, can continue until late morning. The fish are shaken out of the meshes by hand or with shaking machines.

Entangling nets
      Similarly operated are entangling nets, single or double walled, and three-walled trammel nets. These are used in sea fisheries for hake, shark, rays, salmon, sturgeons, halibut, plaice, shrimps, prawns, lobster, spiny lobster, king crabs, and turtles. Single-walled nets are used in the southern part of the Caspian Sea and in the Black Sea to catch sturgeons (sturgeon) by entangling. Iranian fishermen set about 150 sturgeon nets in one row perpendicular to the shoreline. Setting requires much labour; between each two nets a line is tied, which is connected to a short wooden peg driven into the bottom. The Turkish Black Sea fishermen sometimes set sturgeon nets in another form. Two nets always form an angle open to the sea. The nets are held by sticks rammed into the bottom. Sturgeon nets are checked once or even twice each day, depending on weather. For this purpose an Iranian fisherman lies on the bow of his sailboat, towing the vessel along the float line of the net. The sturgeons are taken from the water by hand or with a gaff.

      The most important sea fishery for crustaceans is the king crab fishery in the northern Pacific. For the Japanese, who use entangling nets, this is a very important distant fishery ranking with tuna and salmon fishing. Originally carried on close to shore, king crab fishing was extended in the northern Pacific after its beginnings in the 1870s. The old land stations for processing were replaced by floating factories that accompanied the fishing vessels. The entangling nets are set on the bottom, sometimes 200 nets with a total length of 10 kilometres in one row. Larger catching vessels set 1,200 to 1,300 nets a day, usually in parallel rows about 500 metres apart. Nets stay in the water from five to seven days and are hauled by small open vessels with motor-driven reels, which can take from 2,500 to 3,000 nets per day out of the water. When hauling, the floats and sinkers are untied and the entangled king crabs are taken from the netting. The catch and nets are then transported to the mother ship, where the catch is processed and the nets cleaned, an operation that may require 30 minutes per net. Large racks for drying and cleaning the entangling nets are characteristic of this type of vessel. A single fishing unit may own a permanent set of 15,000 to 30,000 nets.

Harvesting machines
      A relatively new type of fishing gear is the harvesting machine combined with a pump, used in the northern part of the Caspian Sea for sardinelike fish and for squid off the California coast. In both cases the prey is attracted by light. Squid fishing can be done near the surface, but in the Caspian the fish are sucked on board with pumps from depths as great as 110 metres. In pumping, the suction nozzle is moved up and down with attracting lamps. Once on board the fish or squid are strained from the water. The difficulty in fish pumping is to avoid damage to the catch. Only small objects can be pumped without injury.

      Another type of harvesting machine is the hydraulic dredge, with pumps and conveyors. These dredges wash out deeply buried mussels with jets of water under high pressure. The Americans operate such hydraulic dredges to harvest soft clams, and the British use similar machines for cockles. Harvesting machines also are used to cut kelp off California. Giant kelp is harvested by cutting to a maximum depth of 1.2 metres below the surface of the water and is transferred by conveyor belt into the open hold of the vessel.

Andres R.F.T. von Brandt John C. Sainsbury

Fresh water
      Freshwater fishing is carried out in lakes and rivers or streams and to a growing extent in natural and artificial ponds. In some tropical areas, swamps with shallow water, sometimes overgrown with vegetation, are important inland fisheries. Before efficient transportation and distribution of ocean fish was organized, fresh waters were the only resource available for fish and other aquatic products for the inland population. Their importance decreased with the growing bulk fisheries of the seas. Freshwater fish now compose only about 5 percent of the total catch of water products of the world.

General characteristics
      Widely different freshwater species—feeding on bacteria or detritus, plants or plankton, or living as predators—are used for human consumption. Well-known species include trout and whitefish, carp and other cyprinids, catfish, murrals, and tilapias. The desirability of some anadromous fishes—those, such as salmon and sturgeon, that spawn in fresh water but live in the sea—and catadromous fishes—those, most notably the eel, that spawn in the sea but live in fresh water—has led to specialized fisheries in inland waters.

      The kind and quantity of fish found in lakes and rivers vary greatly with the physical and chemical condition of the water. Limnologists, scientists who study conditions in fresh water, classify fresh waters by the quantity of oxygen and essential nutrient salts (nitrates, phosphates, and potash) they contain. Fishermen classify waters by the principal fish to be caught therein. Rivers, for example, are divided into different zones beginning with the source, which is often good trout water, and ending in the estuary, where many coastal varieties of ocean fish can be caught. In like manner, fishermen classify lakes by expected catch (e.g., eels, tilapias, or crayfish).

      The great variations in the productivity of inland waters are explained by differences in their physical and chemical properties. Though some rivers may produce as much as 200 kilograms per hectare (180 pounds per acre) each year and some lakes may yield 160 kilograms per hectare, the world average is about eight kilograms per hectare.

      Pollution produced by chemical preparations applied for agricultural purposes has created serious problems for the world's freshwater fisheries; fish cultivation is increasingly restricted to man-made waters. Traditional freshwater fisheries still supply basic protein to China, Southeast Asia, and tropical Africa but have been seriously affected in the United Kingdom, continental Europe, Japan, Central Asia, and the United States.

      Because of pollution, freshwater fishing in natural waters has declined in industrial countries, but pollution is not totally to blame. The rapid rise in angling as a leisure pastime has created competition for the available waters and the fish in them. Because angling interests can afford higher prices for the rights to available waters, angling is now virtually the only fishing for wild fish that takes place in natural waters in industrialized countries. Some fish species that are considered delicacies and attract high prices are exempt from this trend. Fishing for salmon, eels, and crayfish is still very active on a commercial basis. With these fisheries there are many traditional rights to fishing certain waters.

      In nonindustrialized countries freshwater fishing has increased considerably, mainly under the influence of aid programs. Some of these programs have tried to introduce new and more efficient fishing methods, but the main improvement has been in mechanization of the fishing boats used and in improved methods of preserving and distributing the catch. On some of the larger inland lakes, freshwater fishing is still the primary occupation in the villages along the shore.

      Fish farming for freshwater species is being introduced in developing countries to produce a valuable source of protein. Where natural waters are fished in developing countries, fish management techniques are being used to improve the catch and to prevent overfishing.

Methods
      Many techniques are employed to catch fish in inland waters, some appropriate to lakes alone, some to rivers only, and some to both. Of the many methods employed worldwide, only a few are economical for large-scale operation. Commercial line fishing, which uses many hooked and baited branch lines tied to a single main line, is widely practiced. A simpler technique is handlining, in which single lines with baited hooks are tied to small sticks or trees along the shore or to special devices set along the side of a hole in ice. Handlining is used for deep fishing or for catching in rocky areas. Drifting lines with one or more hooks can also be used on lakes, though seldom in rivers. Lines may also be trolled (trailed) behind a moving boat. On some rivers in tropical and temperate areas, fish are caught by fouling with sharp-pointed hooks. The main difficulty in line fishing is to keep the lines clear and to obtain baits in needed quantity.

      Passive and stationary fishing gear is so important in many lakes and rivers that some fishermen specialize entirely in trapping. Since deep and rocky shores, however, do not favour the use of traps, these devices cannot be used in all areas. Fish seeking shelter may be caught in simple brushwood devices when the brushwood is lifted quickly. More important are traps, such as wooden baskets made of wickerwork or of split bamboo, with retarding devices such as funnels or valves at the entrance. Wooden baskets, generally used in rivers with strong currents, can be set according to the longline system in which the baskets are tied with branch lines on a main line lying across the bottom of the river. Such baskets are usually baited, with the bait sometimes held in small bags or boxes. Today, in river fisheries as in coastal sea fisheries, traps, especially those used for eels, are made of plastic.

      A more modern type of trap is the bag-shaped fyke net, held open by hoops; linked together in long chains, these are used to catch eels in rivers. When equipped with wings and leaders, fyke nets are employed in lakes where there are sheltered places with abundant plant life. Hundreds of such nets can be combined into systems where it is not economical to build large traps.

      Another fishing method important in freshwater fisheries employs small scoop nets or large net bags (stownets). Such gear is known on many European and Asian rivers. The net bag is fixed to the river bottom to catch migrating or drifting fish. Some human control may be necessary; sometimes a watchman lives on a vessel or raft next to the stownet or on a special platform. Though stownets are especially popular in European rivers for eel fishing, their importance is lessening owing to increased boat traffic and to pollution. Moreover, the gear can be too large to be moved easily. In Indonesia stownets up to 100 metres long and up to 40 metres across the mouth are used. Small scoop nets can be operated by hand and pushed or towed over the bottoms in shallow waters. Sometimes this is done by fishnetting parties, in which all the men of a village form a line across the river, with a scoop net in each hand. Sometimes the fisherman stands on a platform built on the side of the stream and simply scoops up fish as they pass; this is done by some African fishermen in Malaŵi and was done by American Indians on the Columbia River in Oregon.

      One of the most common fishing methods in freshwater lakes and rivers is seining, which is done in temperate zones especially in autumn and winter when fish are concentrated in deeper parts of the lakes. Because part of the seine must be dragged over the lake bottom while it surrounds the fish, seining is practicable only where the lake bottom is smooth and where favourable areas (i.e., with fish concentrated near the bottom) are known. In some lakes such areas have been known for a long time and may be named and marked on fishing maps. Seine nets in lake fisheries can be very large, with wings of 1,000 metres each. Since traditional seining required considerable labour, mechanization became desirable. A modern mechanized seine-net fishery requires only a small labour force. In northern countries seine nets are used under ice. For this purpose a number of ice holes are needed for guiding the towing warps with the net on the underside of the ice sheet. Here also manpower is saved by motorized towing and coiling lines and by drilling the holes in the ice with power drills. Some success has been achieved in increasing the efficiency of seine nets by electric light. Fish trying to evade the net can be caught by stunning, or eels lying in the mud during the cold season (generally a time when eel fishing is poor) can be attracted out of the mud by an electrical current. The disadvantage of all seine nets is that they are not selective; many undersized fish that should be preserved cannot escape.

      On larger lakes, sea-fishing methods such as trawling and purse seining are used. Two or more fishing boats are usually required to set a purse seine net, which can then be hauled in manually by people on the shore. Lift nets are often used in fresh water, not only to catch bait fish for line fishing but also to catch crayfish or other freshwater crabs. There are small hand-operated lift nets tightened by frames and larger ones lifted from a gallows or with one or two vessels. Unframed blanket nets are used in rivers in Italy, each corner held by a gallows placed on the banks. Cover pots and cast nets also have some importance in commercial freshwater fisheries. Cover pots are especially used in rice fields or shallow waters with rich vegetation. Cast nets are used more in clear waters in lakes and in rivers; considerable skill is required to cast these. In Russia shooting mechanisms are employed to cast larger nets. Much more important in freshwater fisheries, however, are gill nets. The mesh size of the net can be used to regulate the size of the fish caught; thus smaller, undesired species escape. Lake fishermen use mostly stationary gill nets, anchored near the bottom or floating. River fishermen use gill nets that drift with the current, with one side tied to the boat and the other to a drifting buoy. With entangling two-walled nets and trammel nets, yield can be increased by frightening the fish into the netting; this is accomplished by beating the water or throwing stones.

Andres R.F.T. von Brandt Dag Pike

      Aquaculture is the propagation and husbandry of aquatic plants and animals for commercial, recreational, and scientific purposes. This includes production for supplying other aquaculture operations, for food and industrial products, for stocking sport fisheries, for producing aquatic bait animals, for fee fishing, for ornamental purposes, and for use by the pharmaceutical and chemical industries. These activities can occur both in natural waters and in artificial aquatic impoundments.

      Aquaculture has been in existence since at least 500 BC. However, only in recent times has it assumed commercial importance, with world production more than doubling between 1970 and 1975. The rapid expansion of aquaculture has been to a large extent in the production of relatively high-priced species frequently consumed as a fresh product. Examples are shrimp, crayfish, prawns, trout, salmon, and oysters. However, also increasing is the production of catfish, carp, and tilapias, which are reared in extensive, low-energy systems. For example, catfish farming in the United States has more than quintupled its production since it began to grow in the 1960s.

      The growth of world aquaculture has been stimulated by a number of factors, including population increases, dietary shifts, and advances in aquaculture technology. Limited ocean resources have also helped to create a growing role for aquaculture in helping to meet increasing demands for fish and shellfish.

Farming and rearing in hatcheries
      Fish farming as originally practiced involved capturing immature specimens and then raising them under optimal conditions in which they were well fed and protected from predators and competitors for light and space. It was not until 1733, however, that a German farmer successfully raised fish from eggs that he had artificially obtained and fertilized. Male and female trout were collected when ready for spawning. Eggs and sperm were pressed from their bodies and mixed together under favourable conditions. After the eggs hatched, the fish fry were taken to tanks or ponds for further cultivation. Methods have also been developed for artificial breeding of saltwater fish, and it now appears possible not only to rear sea animals but also to have the complete life cycle under hatchery control.

      Carp raising, practiced worldwide, is a good example of advanced techniques. For the whole life cycle at least three different types of ponds are used in Europe. Special shallow and warm ponds with rich vegetation provide a good environment for spawning, a process that today is often aided by hormone injections. After spawning, the parent fish are separated from the eggs and taken to a second pond. The fry, which hatch after a few days, are transported to shallow, plankton-rich nursing ponds, where they remain until the fall of the year or the next spring. In tropical areas, such as India, carp spawned from wild fish can be collected by experts in natural waters. To collect eggs or fry from wild fish is disadvantageous, however, because the breeder cannot influence the breeding stocks in a desired direction. In Asia, the fry of common or golden carp are thus generally bred under culture conditions in hatcheries. Bigger ponds are needed for rearing the fish in the second year of life. There are large carp ponds in certain areas of central Europe, while in Asia common carp are often cultivated in rice fields, a practice called wetland cultivation. This method is increasingly jeopardized by sprays used to control pests and diseases and by toxic agents resulting from industrial development. For feeding carp in ponds, soybean meal, rice bran, and similar agricultural products are used. Concentrated food in the form of pellets has also been successfully introduced. During the winter season in the temperate zone, the carp are kept in deeper ponds with a dependable flow of water to protect them against freezing. In central Europe, carp are ready for the market after the third summer. In southern Europe, Hungary, and parts of the Balkan Peninsula, carp may be sold after the second summer. In tropical areas the fish grow faster. To accelerate growth, warm-water ponds now exist in the temperate zone, where an average harvest of 400 to 500 kilograms per hectare is normal in intensive cultivation. By scientific management and careful selection it is possible to obtain yields up to 3,500 kilograms per hectare for carp in warm-water ponds.

      Although trout was the first fish to be artificially fertilized, trout cultivation in Europe and North America is much younger than carp cultivation. Trout are cold-water fish and must have a constant supply of sufficient oxygen, making cultivation more difficult. Though trout ponds can be smaller than carp ponds, good year-round water circulation is essential. Trout farms are therefore often located in mountainous areas where plentiful pure water is available. The young fish are obtained exclusively by artificial fertilization; thus, hatchery buildings with low-temperature water and good filters are the centre of this type of pond fishery. There the eggs are kept under control during breeding in special small tanks. As soon as the hatched fry can swim and eat on their own, they are transplanted to rearing ponds for feeding.

      Trout are carnivores; meat-packing by-products are used for feed. Such food may be released into the ponds at predetermined intervals by automatic dispensers. Though many authorities claim that trout should have as much natural foodstuff as possible and therefore should be raised in natural ponds only, in many countries rearing is done in concrete-lined ponds or concrete tanks, which are easy to keep clean and permit disinfectant application. The time necessary to rear fish and the yield per hectare depend on feeding. Some trout farms sell their fish not only fresh and frozen but also smoked and filleted.

      For trout and salmon, a new system of fish cultivation has been introduced. Instead of ponds, enclosures of netting or other materials are placed in natural waters, such as lakes, and also in brackish waters. By this means, areas formerly of low value can be farmed intensively. Farming trout in brackish water or seawater was of especial interest. Since the period preceding World War II, trout and salmon farming in seawater has grown tremendously.

      Many other fish are raised artificially by various methods. Among these are sturgeon, milkfish, mullet, tilapias, striped bass, redfish, sea bass, and catfish.

Other types of aquaculture

Mollusks (mollusk)
      Other important objects of cultivation in many parts of the world are mollusks. Though few water snails are cultivated, bivalves (bivalve), especially oysters (oyster), are quite important in Asia, Europe, and North America. For centuries French fishermen cultivated oysters by placing twigs in the water to which free-swimming oyster larvae could attach. In northern Europe, oysters have been cultivated on the ocean bottom, but low winter temperatures limit the extent of this activity. In the Mediterranean, the Romans are said to have been the first to farm oysters. Today, oysters are cultivated on the Pacific coast of North America, as well as on the southern Atlantic coast and the Gulf of Mexico. Australia, the Philippines, and South Africa also possess farms, and the Japanese grow edible oysters from Hokkaido in the north to Kyushu in the south. Japanese farms are divided into two classes: some cultivate seed oysters only, while others raise them for food, especially for export. The Japanese cultivate oysters on the sea bottom (horizontally) and on sticks (vertically). To collect the larvae, which affix themselves to any firm object, such as an old shell or a stone, fishermen place various devices in the water. These may be bamboo sticks with shells attached or a rope with shells hanging from it; limed tiles and wooden plates have been used for the same purpose in Europe. Production is greatest in places with good shelter against rough seas, a tidal current to carry food to the larvae, adequate salinity, and optimum temperature.

      After some growing time, the larvae are loosened and transported to other areas for maturation under the best conditions. While growing to marketable size, the oysters must be protected against predators, such as starfish (sea star) and oyster drillers. As starfish damage cannot be completely avoided when growing oysters on the bottom, a vertical system of culture is preferred in many areas; the oysters hang in clusters or in baskets or are fixed on poles in sheltered bays. In an alternative system, the oysters remain in horizontal trays kept at some distance from the bottom. Though such tray-raised oysters are expensive, they generally survive better than those reared directly on the bottom.

      Blue mussels (mussel) are cultivated in Italy, Spain, France, The Netherlands, and near Germany in the North Sea and the Baltic. There, too, horizontal-bottom methods have been replaced by vertical culture. Originally, the young mussels, collected from wild stocks, were spread on controlled banks leased by a fisherman from the government. Their capacity to grow in very extensive and dense beds is highly advantageous. Before full-grown mussels are sent in sacks to the market, special purification methods are employed to wash out sand. Today vertical culture is practiced with sticks pushed into the ocean bottom or with lines hanging from rafts. Unfortunately, line cultures may be damaged in winter; thus, experiments have been made with polyethylene net bags and endless tubes of polypropylene netting. These bags must be strong enough to carry the mussels until harvesting.

      Many other mollusks are cultivated, including soft clams and scallops. The Japanese even raise octopuses and squid. For bivalves, the problems are roughly the same as mentioned above: collecting the larvae; raising the young mussels under good conditions; protecting them against predators; harvesting the adults without injury; and sometimes cleaning for the market.

      Among inedible bivalves, pearl oysters deserve mention. Pearl farming is one of the most famous industries of Japan, dating to 1893, when a Japanese first succeeded in cultivating pearls. Under the skin of an oyster, the pearl farmer inserts a pearl nucleus (a small spherical shell fragment wrapped in a piece of living oyster tissue). The treated oyster is placed in a culture cage on a floating raft; after some months or years, the cultured oyster produces a pearl. Japan's pearl production is still concentrated along the coast of Mie Prefecture, where it was developed.

Crustaceans (crustacean)
      Crustaceans—mainly shrimps (shrimp), crayfish, and prawns—are also cultivated. In traditional Japanese practice, immature shrimps are caught in coastal waters and transferred to ponds. Today, mostly in the United States and Japan, shrimps are cultivated by catching adult egg-bearing females. The presence of eggs can be detected by examining the ovaries, usually visible through the shell. The female shrimps are transferred to large seawater ponds adjacent to the sea or to tanks. After hatching, the shrimps are fed in indoor tanks with cultivated plankton. After 10 days they are brought to shallow ponds for further cultivation or for distribution to other farms.

      Americans, Australians, and Europeans have shown interest in commercial lobster culture. Production methods are not yet economical, however. The animals take two to three years to reach market size, and they have a high mortality rate. Lobsters must molt in order to grow and are quite vulnerable during the molting period.

      A final important item in aquaculture is seaweed. Laver, a red alga, is a traditional part of the Japanese diet. The Japanese first cultivated this plant in the late 17th century in the brackish water of Tokyo Bay. Originally, a vertical method was used, with bushes placed in the water. A horizontal method is now employed: large meshed netting made of rough materials is hung horizontally between poles at the proper depth. The algae grow there by themselves and the owners harvest them from the nets by hand. Harvesting begins early in November and continues until about March. After the season is over, the gear is removed and stored. Part-time fishermen or land farmers often engage in such algae culture. Though other algae are used for food and in industry today, commercial farming has yet to begin.

Andres R.F.T. von Brandt Clyde H. Amundson

Additional Reading

Commercial fishing
The productivity of the seas and the exploitation of the living resources in the world's oceans are illustrated in Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Atlas of the Living Resources of the Seas, 4th ed. (1981). Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Multilingual Dictionary of Fish and Fish Products, 2nd ed. (1978, reprinted with corrections, 1984), provides comprehensive information on fish, fish products, and other marine life used commercially. Scientific research supporting commercial fishing is discussed in Taivo Laevastu and Murray L. Hayes, Fisheries Oceanography and Ecology (1981); Tony J. Pitcher and Paul J.B. Hart, Fisheries Ecology (1982); and Maurice E. Stansby, Industrial Fishery Technology, 2nd ed. (1976). Developments in commercial fishing are detailed in studies of local areas, such as Peter Pownall, Fisheries of Australia (1979); and Peter R. Sinclair, State Intervention and the Newfoundland Fisheries (1987). C.R.P.C. Branson (ed.), Fishermen's Handbook, 2nd ed. (1987), explains and illustrates many situations occurring in commercial fishing.

Equipment, facilities, and methods
John C. Sainsbury, Commercial Fishing Methods: An Introduction to Vessels and Gears, 2nd ed. (1986), describes the basics of the fishing industry. Andres von Brandt, Fish Catching Methods of the World, 3rd rev. ed. (1984), surveys fishing methods and equipment, from the most primitive to the totally computerized and automated. Dag Pike, Fishing Boats and Their Equipment (1979), examines the design factors of boats and their effect on fishing productivity. Jan-Olof Traung (ed.), Fishing Boats of the World, 3 vol. (1955–67), provides excellent basic information on boats for various fishing methods. Specific methods and technologies are discussed in Echo Sounding and Sonar for Fishing (1980), a Food and Agriculture Organization fishing manual; David B. Thomson, Seine Fishing: Bottom Fishing with Rope Warps and Wing Trawls, rev. ed. (1981), and Pair Trawling and Pair Seining: The Technology of Two-Boat Fishing (1978); J.H. Merritt, Refrigeration on Fishing Vessels, rev. ed. (1978); and J.J. Connell (ed.), Advances in Fish Science and Technology (1980). Fishing Ports and Markets (1970) is a collection of papers from a conference held under the auspices of the Food and Agriculture Organization.

Fisheries
The resources, ecology, and management of marine and freshwater fisheries are discussed in Robert J. Browning, Fisheries of the North Pacific: History, Species, Gear, & Processes, rev. ed. (1980); Robert T. Lackey and Larry A. Nielsen (eds.), Fisheries Management (1980); Frederick W. Bell, Food from the Sea: The Economics and Politics of Ocean Fisheries (1978); Stephen Cunningham, Michael R. Dunn, and David Whitmarsh, Fisheries Economics (1985); G.C. Eddie, Engineering, Economics, and Fisheries Management (1983); Toivo Laevastu and Herbert A. Larkins, Marine Fisheries Ecosystem: Its Quantitative Evaluation and Management (1981); Robin L. Welcomme, Fisheries Ecology of Floodplain Rivers (1979); Robin G. Templeton (ed.), Freshwater Fisheries Management (1984); and Shelby D. Gerking (ed.), Ecology of Freshwater Fish Production (1978). Ongoing research and developments in the field are reported in Fisheries of the United States (annual); and Ocean Yearbook.John C. Sainsbury Dag Pike

Aquaculture
Various aspects of commercial fish farming throughout the world are discussed in Elisabeth Mann Borgese, Seafarm: The Story of Aquaculture (1980); Robert Kirk, A History of Marine Fish Culture in Europe and North America (1987); Marcel Huet, Textbook of Fish Culture: Breeding and Cultivation of Fish, 2nd ed. (1986; originally published in French, 1970); E. Evan Brown, World Fish Farming: Cultivation and Economics, 2nd ed. (1983); Malcolm C.M. Beveridge, Cage Aquaculture (1987); James E. Lannan, R. Oneal Smitherman, and George Tchobanoglous (eds.), Principles and Practices of Pond Aquaculture (1986); Robert R. Stickney, Principles of Warmwater Aquaculture (1979); Fredrick W. Wheaton, Aquacultural Engineering (1977, reprinted 1985); John P. Stevenson, Trout Farming Manual, 2nd ed. (1987); Robert R. Stickney (ed.), Culture of Nonsalmonid Freshwater Fishes (1986); and Fredrick W. Wheaton and Thomas B. Lawson, Processing Aquatic Food Products (1985). A good overview article is William H. Queen, “Aquaculture: A Renewal of Interest,” Currents, 3(3):20–25 (1988).Clyde H. Amundson

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