A Review of Studies on Set Gear Selectivity in the Adriatic Sea

Martina Scanu; Luca Bolognini; Fabio Grati;

The Adriatic Sea is one of the world’s most heavily exploited areas, with a large number and variety of commercial important species caught and a wide range of fishing methods employed. In this basin, small-scale fisheries (SSFs), performed by fishing vessels of an overall length <12 m and not using towed gear, play a major socioeconomic role. The Adriatic SSFs are diverse, complex, and dynamic; they are active throughout the year using a wide range of fishing strategies. However, the most commonly employed gears are gillnets, trammel nets, and traps, to catch a pool of target species in coastal areas. In general, good fisheries management requires that fishing gears should catch the large adult fish, while small juveniles are allowed to escape; in SSF sector this is translated into mesh size regulation. The mesh size or mesh opening is normally defined as the distance between opposite corners of the mesh when it is fully stretched (stretched mesh size). In principle, the larger the mesh size, the greater is the chance of small fish escaping through the gaps between the netting twines. Since passive nets are considered less harmful to stocks and habitats than other gears, their selectivity is less explored. Here is presented a review of the available literature on the Adriatic SSF gear selectivity determined by technical features, and consequent quali-quantitative composition of catches.


2020 - Contribution in volume


The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry, pp. 1–20, 2020


Keywords: Gillnet, Selectivity, Small-scale fishery, The Adriatic Sea, Trammel net


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The research activities of the Institute are carried out in the context of research, development and innovation projects, both national and international, based on regional funding programs (POR FEAMPA - Regional Operational Program of the European Maritime Affairs Fisheries Fund and Aquaculture and POR FESR - Regional Operational Program of the European Regional Development Fund) or ministerial (PRIN - Projects of relevant national interest, PNRA - National Research Program in Antarctica, PO FEAMPA - National Operational Program European Maritime Affairs Fisheries and Aquaculture Fund) , programs for European Territorial Cooperation (Interreg), direct funding programs of the European Commission (Horizon2020 and Horizon Europe, Life, JPI - Joint Programming Initiatives, ERA-NET Cofund) and thematic collaboration initiatives managed by international organizations such as, for example , the FAO - GFCM (General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean). The Institute also develops funded projects in the context of collaborations with private companies in the sectors of the blue economy as well as technology transfer and research results. Research projects, mainly of a collaborative nature, are developed through a wide network of partners that include major Italian and foreign research institutions and universities.

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