Shrimp fishery

Commercial fisheries

Common methods for catching shrimp include otter trawls, cast nets, seines, shrimp baiting and dip netting. Trawling involves the use of a system of nets. In some parts of the Pacific Northwest, fishing with baited traps is also common.

People who catch shrimp are referred to as shrimpers, and the act of catching shrimp is called shrimping. Strikers are the crewmen on the boat who set up and strike the nets.

The following table shows the yearly weight of shrimp and prawns captured globally in millions of tonnes.

Production

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

Million tonnes

3.03

3.09

2.96

2.97

3.55

3.54

3.42

Shrimp bycatch

According to the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service, in the Gulf of Mexico, three pounds of bycatch are caught for every pound of shrimp that goes to market. According to the Worldwide Fund for Nature, in the Gulf of Thailand it can be 14 pounds of bycatch per pound of shrimp. Bycatch is often discarded dead or dying by the time it is returned to the sea. Sea turtles, already critically endangered, have been killed by the thousands in shrimp trawl nets.

Concerns about bycatch have led fishermen and scientists to develop devices they can put on their nets to reduce unwanted catch. The “bycatch reduction device” (BRD) and the Nordmore grate are net modifications that help fish escape from shrimp nets. All US shrimp trawlersnd all foreign fleets selling shrimp in the USre supposed to outfit their nets with trap-door turtle excluder devices (TEDs) to let sea turtles escape. However, not every nation enforces TED use with equal vigor.

Recreational fisheries

Shrimp baiting is a recreational shrimping technique. It involves using bait patties, which are a time-release bait, typically concocted of at least fish meal and clay, though shrimpers sometimes have a secret concoction for their bait patties. The patties are then put in the water, and one waits for the shrimp to arrive. The fisher then throws a cast net over the shrimp to catch them. These nets are typically anywhere from 4 to 10 feet in length when they are unfurled and have a ring of lead weights around the bottom. A lantern is usually placed over the spot where the bait patties have been set out.

Dip netting is another recreational shrimping technique. Its name comes from the traditional tool used to scoop shrimp out of shallow water grass flats by individual shrimpers. Hand nets have been in use for centuries and traditional “push” nets can still be found in use along the French and British coasts as well as parts of New England.

In the Gulf of Mexico, the shrimp season takes place in the summer months. The timing is generally between late May and early July beginning later and ending earlier the further north along the coast a location is.

Shrimpers on horseback, Oostduinkerke, Belgium.

Evening silhouettes of shrimp boats in Palacios, Texas.

Pandalus borealis is a popular food source.

See also

Krill fishery

Shrimp farm

Shrimp turtle case

Notes

^ FAO (2007) State of the World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2006. Fisheries and Aquaculture Department. ISBN 978-92-5-105568-7

Further reading

The Carolina Watermen by Richard and Barbara Kelly (Blair, 1993)

FAO: Shrimp otter trawling

Films on Shrimp Fishing

Carolina Caught from SCETV’s Carolina Stories documentary series

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Principal commercial fishery species groups

Wild

Large pelagic fish

Mackerel  Salmon  Shark  Swordfish  Tuna (yellowfin, bigeye, bluefin, albacore and skipjack)

Forage fish

Anchovy  Capelin  Herring  Hilsa  Menhaden  Sardines  Shad

Demersal fish

Catfish  Cod (Atlantic, Pacific)  Flatfish (flounder, halibut, plaice, sole and turbot)  Haddock  Mullet  Orange roughy  Pollock  Smelt-whitings  Toothfish

Freshwater fish

Carp  Sturgeon  Tilapia  Trout

Other wild fish

Eel  Whitebait  more…

Crustaceans

Crab  Krill  Lobster  Shrimp  more…

Molluscs

Abalone  Mussels  Octopus  Oysters  Scallops  Squid  more…

Echinoderms

Sea cucumbers  Sea urchin  more…

Farmed

Carp (bighead, common, crucian, grass, silver)  Catfish  Freshwater prawns  Mussels  Oysters  Salmon (Atlantic, salmon trout, coho, chinook)  Tilapia  Shrimp

Commercial fishing  World fish production  Fishing topics  Fisheries glossary

Categories: Caridea | Dendrobranchiata | Fisheries

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