Harvesting Alaska Whitefish Varieties
Trawl
A trawl is a large, bag-shaped net that is towed by a fishing vessel. Trawlers are generally large boats ranging from 70 feet to over 200 feet in length. The doors, because of the way they are built and rigged to the trawl, keep the mouth of the trawl open as it moves through the water. The headrope is equipped with floats forming the upper opening. The footrope is rigged with weights forming the lower opening. Trawlers use sophisticated ultrasonic devices both for location of fish underwater and for species identification.
Pelagic trawls sometimes contact the ocean bottom, but their heavy doors and wires are kept off the bottom to avoid damage to benthic habitat. Fishing with pelagic trawls is a selective method of fishing, because the nets can be operated in ways to minimize the incidental catch of non-target species. Pollock are usually harvested with few other species. Sole are generally captured in bottom trawls in mixtures of the various species which are sorted onboard the fishing vessel. Trawling is allowed only in certain areas and strict limits are enforced upon the amount of non-target species (such as crab or halibut) that may be caught. In fact, it frequently happens that a trawl fishery is closed because it reached the pre-set “bycatch” limit, and does not achieve full harvest of its target species.
Upon locating a school of the desired species, the vessel trawls through the school and captures the fish. The fish accumulate in the end of the trawl, which is called the “cod end”, regardless of the species of fish being harvested. Electronic sensors tell the harvester exactly where the trawl is in relation to the fish and the ocean floor, while other sensors report how full the trawl becomes. When capture is complete, the trawl is brought to the surface.
Once the trawl full of fish reaches the surface of the water, one of two things happens. If the vessel has the ability to process the fish onboard, it is called a factory-trawler or a freezer-trawler or catcher-processor. These vessels simply pull the net aboard, empty the net, sort the species, and process the catch. If the vessel is only capable of catching fish, then it must deliver the catch to a processing plant. These processing plants might be in other vessels, called floating processors, or they might be on shore. The catcher-vessel (trawler) usually takes the fish onboard and stores the fish in refrigerated tanks below decks. This keeps the fish in top quality until they are delivered and processed. In either case, the fish are kept well-chilled, and they are processed within a few hours of harvest. Trawls are the only fishing method used to harvest pollock and sole. They are sometimes used to catch cod and black cod but never halibut.
Longline
The only legal fishing method for halibut is longline gear. Longline fishing is also often used for harvesting black cod and cod, but never for pollock or sole. Longline fishing vessels are usually independently run by owner-operators. Some longliners are small boats, less than 50 feet in length, but most are somewhat larger.
Longline gear is composed of groundline, buoy lines, and gangions, which are short pieces of line with hooks on the end. Longlines are set along the seabed, with baited hooks every few yards. Longline hooks are retrieved one at a time. The fishermen can unhook other species of fish and return them alive to the sea without bringing them on board. In this way, longlining is considered a style of fishing with very little bycatch.
Pot Fishing
The third type of fishing gear used to catch Alaska whitefish is pot gear. Pots are used only for black cod and cod, never for pollock, halibut, or sole.
Pots are large steel-framed cages covered in net mesh. The baited pots are placed on the seafloor where they trap the fish. Fish enter the traps through tunnels but cannot escape. Later the pots are retrieved and the fish are sorted on deck. Non-target fishes are returned alive to the sea.
Jig Fishing
Jig fishing is a hook and line fishing method that utilizes artificial lures and an electric machine to jerk (jig) the line up and down. Each machine may have up to five lines and each line may have up to 30 hooks attached. The fish are taken off the hooks and handled individually on the boat.
Along with longlining, jig fishing is the only other legal hook-and-line method for catching cod. Rockfish and ling cod are also harvested using this method. Jig fishing reels in hundreds of thousands of pounds of fish per year; however, this is a small percentage of the total Alaskan catch.
This program brought to you by
The Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute
