Benthic invertebrates’ by-catches in Ifremer bottom trawl surveys in the English Channel and Southern North Sea: 2006-2018 observations

Evento de muestreo
Última versión publicado por IFREMER - French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea el jul 11, 2023 IFREMER - French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea
Fecha de publicación:
11 de julio de 2023
Licencia:
CC-BY-NC 4.0

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Descripción

Bottom trawling mostly targets fish and cephalopods while mega-zooplancton and most other benthic invertebrates are considered as by-catches of this fishing technique. The mesh size of bottom trawl, generally decreasing from opening to cod-end, and the ground gear used (usually only scratching the seabed surface) result in mostly mega-(more than 2 cm) epifauna being captured. Although bottom trawl is seldom recognised as a valid sampling device for benthic invertebrate species, such observations are nonetheless believed to be particularly relevant as 1) they represent the benthic fauna fraction the most likely affected by bottom fishing 2) they integrate assemblages’ composition over large areas (3-4 km long and 10-20 m large) and are more representative of larger scale habitat structure and 3) they are particularly suited to collect over-dispersed or motile species. IFREMER contributes to the collection of basic biological data in the English Channel and North Sea through its annual bottom trawl surveys, the CGFS (Channel Ground Fish Survey, carried out in October since 1988 on board of the RVs Gwen Drez and later Thalassa, Coppin and Travers-Trolet, 1989) and the IBTS (International Bottom Trawl Survey, undertaken in January/February since 1970 on board of the RV Thalassa, Verin, 1992). Since 2006, all megabenthic invertebrates captured in the trawl have been identified, counted and weighted. Additionally, in September 2014, IFREMER carried out a bottom trawl scientific survey, CAMANOC (Campagne Manche Occidentale, Travers-Trolet and Verin, 2014), on board of the RV Thalassa in the western English Channel, where megabenthic invertebrates caught in the trawl were also identified. The CGFS had a fixed sampling design while IBTS and CAMANOC had a random stratified sampling strategy but with varying intensity depending on the covered survey area. Their data merged together cover the entire English Channel and southern part of the North Sea although there are much more observations and longer time series in the eastern part of the Channel than in the western part. For all three surveys, the sampling gears used were all Very High Vertical Opening (VHVO) bottom trawls (or GOV), well adapted for catching demersal species (in particular fish and cephalopods), with a 10 mm mesh size at the cod-end for catching juveniles. The sampling strategy was using standard 30 minutes hauls at 4 knot speed during daylight, evenly distributed over the whole study area. Demersal species and megafauna/epifauna caught in the bottom trawl were sorted, identified, counted and weighed (ICES, 2017). The present dataset focuses on benthic invertebrates and is composed of two tables. The haul table gives information about each operation (survey, date, location, gear type, swept area in km2). The catch table gives information on species catch raised as total number or total weight (g) in the haul. It is strongly recommended to standardise these values per km2 as the swept area may vary vastly from one observation to the next, due to both current speed and difference in gear size. When abundance or weight were not evaluated, the value -1 is used and marks the presence of the species in the catch. Colonial species are not generally counted. Bottom trawling mostly targets fish and cephalopods while mega-zooplancton and most other benthic invertebrates are considered as by-catches of this fishing technique. The mesh size of bottom trawl, generally decreasing from opening to cod-end, and the ground gear used (usually only scratching the seabed surface) result in mostly mega-(more than 2 cm) epifauna being captured. Although bottom trawl is seldom recognised as a valid sampling device for benthic invertebrate species, such observations are nonetheless believed to be particularly relevant as 1) they represent the benthic fauna fraction the most likely affected by bottom fishing 2) they integrate assemblages’ composition over large areas (3-4 km long and 10-20 m large) and are more representative of larger scale habitat structure and 3) they are particularly suited to collect over-dispersed or motile species. IFREMER contributes to the collection of basic biological data in the English Channel and North Sea through its annual bottom trawl surveys, the CGFS (Channel Ground Fish Survey, carried out in October since 1988 on board of the RVs Gwen Drez and later Thalassa, Coppin and Travers-Trolet, 1989) and the IBTS (International Bottom Trawl Survey, undertaken in January/February since 1970 on board of the RV Thalassa, Verin, 1992). Since 2006, all megabenthic invertebrates captured in the trawl have been identified, counted and weighted. Additionally, in September 2014, IFREMER carried out a bottom trawl scientific survey, CAMANOC (Campagne Manche Occidentale, Travers-Trolet and Verin, 2014), on board of the RV Thalassa in the western English Channel, where megabenthic invertebrates caught in the trawl were also identified. The CGFS had a fixed sampling design while IBTS and CAMANOC had a random stratified sampling strategy but with varying intensity depending on the covered survey area. Their data merged together cover the entire English Channel and southern part of the North Sea although there are much more observations and longer time series in the eastern part of the Channel than in the western part. For all three surveys, the sampling gears used were all Very High Vertical Opening (VHVO) bottom trawls (or GOV), well adapted for catching demersal species (in particular fish and cephalopods), with a 10 mm mesh size at the cod-end for catching juveniles. The sampling strategy was using standard 30 minutes hauls at 4 knot speed during daylight, evenly distributed over the whole study area. Demersal species and megafauna/epifauna caught in the bottom trawl were sorted, identified, counted and weighed (ICES, 2017). The present dataset focuses on benthic invertebrates and is composed of two tables. The haul table gives information about each operation (survey, date, location, gear type, swept area in km2). The catch table gives information on species catch raised as total number or total weight (g) in the haul. It is strongly recommended to standardise these values per km2 as the swept area may vary vastly from one observation to the next, due to both current speed and difference in gear size. When abundance or weight were not evaluated, the value -1 is used and marks the presence of the species in the catch. Colonial species are not generally counted.Bottom trawling mostly targets fish and cephalopods while mega-zooplancton and most other benthic invertebrates are considered as by-catches of this fishing technique. The mesh size of bottom trawl, generally decreasing from opening to cod-end, and the ground gear used (usually only scratching the seabed surface) result in mostly mega-(more than 2 cm) epifauna being captured. Although bottom trawl is seldom recognised as a valid sampling device for benthic invertebrate species, such observations are nonetheless believed to be particularly relevant as 1) they represent the benthic fauna fraction the most likely affected by bottom fishing 2) they integrate assemblages’ composition over large areas (3-4 km long and 10-20 m large) and are more representative of larger scale habitat structure and 3) they are particularly suited to collect over-dispersed or motile species. IFREMER contributes to the collection of basic biological data in the English Channel and North Sea through its annual bottom trawl surveys, the CGFS (Channel Ground Fish Survey, carried out in October since 1988 on board of the RVs Gwen Drez and later Thalassa, Coppin and Travers-Trolet, 1989) and the IBTS (International Bottom Trawl Survey, undertaken in January/February since 1970 on board of the RV Thalassa, Verin, 1992). Since 2006, all megabenthic invertebrates captured in the trawl have been identified, counted and weighted. Additionally, in September 2014, IFREMER carried out a bottom trawl scientific survey, CAMANOC (Campagne Manche Occidentale, Travers-Trolet and Verin, 2014), on board of the RV Thalassa in the western English Channel, where megabenthic invertebrates caught in the trawl were also identified. The CGFS had a fixed sampling design while IBTS and CAMANOC had a random stratified sampling strategy but with varying intensity depending on the covered survey area. Their data merged together cover the entire English Channel and southern part of the North Sea although there are much more observations and longer time series in the eastern part of the Channel than in the western part. For all three surveys, the sampling gears used were all Very High Vertical Opening (VHVO) bottom trawls (or GOV), well adapted for catching demersal species (in particular fish and cephalopods), with a 10 mm mesh size at the cod-end for catching juveniles. The sampling strategy was using standard 30 minutes hauls at 4 knot speed during daylight, evenly distributed over the whole study area. Demersal species and megafauna/epifauna caught in the bottom trawl were sorted, identified, counted and weighed (ICES, 2017). The present dataset focuses on benthic invertebrates and is composed of two tables. The haul table gives information about each operation (survey, date, location, gear type, swept area in km2). The catch table gives information on species catch raised as total number or total weight (g) in the haul. It is strongly recommended to standardise these values per km2 as the swept area may vary vastly from one observation to the next, due to both current speed and difference in gear size. When abundance or weight were not evaluated, the value -1 is used and marks the presence of the species in the catch. Colonial species are not generally counted.

Registros

Los datos en este recurso de evento de muestreo han sido publicados como Archivo Darwin Core(DwC-A), el cual es un formato estándar para compartir datos de biodiversidad como un conjunto de una o más tablas de datos. La tabla de datos del core contiene 2.452 registros.

también existen 2 tablas de datos de extensiones. Un registro en una extensión provee información adicional sobre un registro en el core. El número de registros en cada tabla de datos de la extensión se ilustra a continuación.

Event (core)
2452
MeasurementOrFacts 
82924
Occurrence 
41462

Este IPT archiva los datos y, por lo tanto, sirve como repositorio de datos. Los datos y los metadatos del recurso están disponibles para su descarga en la sección descargas. La tabla versiones enumera otras versiones del recurso que se han puesto a disposición del público y permite seguir los cambios realizados en el recurso a lo largo del tiempo.

Versiones

La siguiente tabla muestra sólo las versiones publicadas del recurso que son de acceso público.

Derechos

Los usuarios deben respetar los siguientes derechos de uso:

El publicador y propietario de los derechos de este trabajo es IFREMER - French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea. Esta obra está bajo una licencia Creative Commons de Atribución/Reconocimiento-NoComercial (CC-BY-NC 4.0).

Registro GBIF

Este recurso ha sido registrado en GBIF con el siguiente UUID: 0be687cb-a53e-4f2f-bd46-a93ac4700c36.  IFREMER - French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea publica este recurso y está registrado en GBIF como un publicador de datos avalado por GBIF France.

Palabras clave

benthic fauna; bottom trawl; megafauna; epifauna; Community composition; Taxonomic diversity; Samplingevent

Contactos

Sandrine Vaz
  • Proveedor De Los Metadatos
  • Punto De Contacto
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Auber Arnaud
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Franck Coppin
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Nicolas Desroy
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Aurelie Foveau
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Nicolas Goascoz
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Coline Lazard
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Didier Le Roy
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Jocelyne Martin
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Jerome Quinquis
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Manuel Rouquette
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Morgane Travers-Trolet
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Yves Verin
  • Originador
  • Researcher
IFREMER
Sandrine Vaz
  • Proveedor De Los Metadatos
  • Punto De Contacto
  • Researcher

Cobertura geográfica

English Channel and Southern North Sea

Coordenadas límite Latitud Mínima Longitud Mínima [48,656, -5,855], Latitud Máxima Longitud Máxima [56,278, 8,157]

Cobertura temporal

Fecha Inicial / Fecha Final 2006-01-01 / 2018-01-01

Datos del proyecto

No hay descripción disponible

Título CAMANOC, CGFS : CHANNEL GROUND FISH SURVEY, IBTS INTERNATIONAL BOTTOM TRAWL SURVEY (IBTS)

Personas asociadas al proyecto:

Sandrine Vaz
  • Principal Investigator

Métodos de muestreo

No hay descripción disponible

Descripción de la metodología paso a paso:

  1. ICES (2017). Manual of the IBTS North Eastern Atlantic Surveys. Series of ICES Survey Protocols SISP 15. https://doi.org/10.17895/ices.pub.3519

Metadatos adicionales

This dataset is published to GBIF through the PNDB catalogue https://data.pndb.fr/

Identificadores alternativos https://doi.org/10.17882/59595
0be687cb-a53e-4f2f-bd46-a93ac4700c36
https://ipt-pndb.gbif.fr/resource?r=ifremer_benthic_invertebrates