Assessment of participation and resource impact of shrimp baiting in coastal South Caroling during Dale Theiling SEDAR-PW6-RD36.

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Assessment of participation and resource impact of shrimp baiting in coastal South Caroling during 1987 Dale Theiling SEDAR-PW6-RD36 6 June 2014

interviewer was assigned to the County-Colleton County area and one to the Charleston County-Georgetown County area. They spent an 25 hours during five or six nights per week at scheduled landings. To boaters evidently involved in the subject fishery, they identified themselves as interviewers of the South Carolina Wildlife and Marine Resources Department and asked if they would voluntarily respond to several questions concerning their night s baiting.. The boat landing interview form (Figure 5) was completed by the interviewer. It was designed so that answers would be numerical to allow for quantitative analysis. The survey did not solicit opinions; only the question, Did you have any conflict tonight or any night this season? was intended to generate qualitative responses. As was expected, a great deal of such information was gained by interviewers through their observations and conversations with shrimp baiters. Estimates of total catch were made by surveyors by visual inspection. Length measurements of shrimp taken by baiting were recorded for as many catches as possible. Generally from 20 to whole individuals randomly selected were measured by interviewers to complete field interviews. For each boat landing, monthly mean lengths in metric units were later converted to commercial market size categories. facilitated seasonal and geographic comparisons of baiied shrimp data to that routinely collected from the trawler industry. Specific objectives of the boat landing phase of the study were to document the number of individuals per boat involved in the fishery, in what counties they resided, and whether they had participated in the fishery in a previous year. Also to be documented were the size of boats used, radius and mesh-site of cast nets, extent of bait types in use, numbers of bait marking poles in use, and amounts and sizes of shrimp taken. Boat Mail Survey With shrimp baiting activity virtually completed by mid-december, a postcard survey mailing was made on December to assess the use of South Carolina boats in the fishery. The universe of boats was the South Carolina boat registration file prepared and maintained by the Division of Administrative Services of the Wildlife and Marine Resources Department. A sample of this file of over 289,000 boats was used to best bracket boats of the types and sizes involved in the baiting fishery and to assure that all South Carolina counties were equitably sampled within two categories. had revealed that the majority of baiters were from those counties bordering the coast or being in near proximity to saltwaters (Figure 6). These nine counties constituted Category I for sampling and reporting purposes, and all other South Carolina counties constituted Category II. Interviewer observations documented that participants in the fishery used chiefly small and mid-sized outboard motor boats. Based on this information a bracket of boats of 12 feet in length to less than 20 feet in length was defined. Fully excluded were sailboats, houseboats, and inflatables. By means of random selection computer programming, 8,000 bracketed boats were selected from Category I counties (coastal area), and 4,000 bracketed boats were selected from Category II counties (inland area). Different color cards were utilized for Category and Category boat owners to facilitate sorting them when returned. Table 1 presents the numbers of boats in continue

Four of estimated total take by baiters using boats during 1967, with conversion equations quarts, heads-on, quarts, heads-on, without ice pounds, heads-on, without ice pounds, heads-off, without ice for shrimp I quart, heads-on 1.46 pounds, heads-on I pound, heads-on pounds, heads-off I pound, heads-off 1.54 pounds, heads-on Discussion Baiting Catch Relative to Trawler Catch The Fisheries Statistics Section of the Marine Resources Division acquired detailed records of commercial shrimp trawler catches in 1987 with associated effort, trawling area, and species composition data. Such data were collected by means of avoluntary trip ticket system and dockside sampling, and measured the dynamic aspects of the commercial fishery. In 1987, of South Carolina s shrimp trawler catch was recorded by this method (Andrew Applegate, personal communication). Products of the system were catch-per-day-of-effort figures for general areas in nearshore and inshore trawling waters and monthly shrimp size and species composition summaries. Such data provide the best points of comparison between the ostensibly recreational baiting fishery and the commercial trawler fishery. The average daily catches of trawlers participating in the reporting system during Septemberthrough December 1987 were 284 pounds (heads on) in Beaufort County and 255 pounds (heads on) in Charleston County (Table 14). In comparison the average nightly per-boat catches (without ice) by shrimp baiters were 54.0 pounds in Beaufort County and 41.1 pounds in Charleston County. It was documented that trawlers landing in South Carolina during the full 1987 season (June through December) produced 5,479,OOO pounds of whole shrimp. Of these, 4,426,OOO pounds were white shrimp, the principal target of bait shrimpers. Based on this project, the estimated catch by bait shrimpers who used boats was equal to 40 percent of the trawler white shrimp catch and was 29 percent of the combined recorded white shrimp catch (Table 15). Table 16 presents numbers and monthly size information for shrimp measured by interviewers. Count groups are those used in shrimp marketing. Figure 9 allows comparison of these sizes with those taken by commercial trawlers from offshore trawling areas geographically adjacent to the inshore areas of the boat ings. 24 Click here to continue