An overview of circle hook use and management measures in UNITED ST ATES marine fisheries. Wilson, J., A. & Diaz, G., A. 7, 2012. Paper doi abstract bibtex We provide an overview of the use of, and management measures for, circle hooks
in various marine fisheries of the United States. Circle hooks have long been known
for their conservation benefits, such as reducing deep hooking, and therefore,
reducing post-release mortality associated with this event. Some US commercial
pelagic longline vessels voluntarily started using circle hooks due to increased
catch rates for some target species and increased post-release survival of non-target
species, whereas recreational anglers began using circle hooks to reduce post-release
mortality in catch-and-release fisheries. Despite previous voluntary circle hook use,
circle hooks have been a relatively new fishery management tool in US state and
federal fisheries. However, the difference in jurisdiction between state and federal
waters has resulted in some disparity in state and federal circle hook regulations.
In general, consistent management regulations between state and federal waters
should be more beneficial for fish stocks that have both state and federal fisheries.
Finally, while state and federal circle hook regulations are documented, voluntary
circle hook use by commercial and recreational fishers participating in different
state and federal fisheries is more difficult to characterize. Thus, overall circle hook
use is difficult to quantify.
@misc{
title = {An overview of circle hook use and management measures in UNITED ST ATES marine fisheries},
type = {misc},
year = {2012},
source = {Bulletin of Marine Science},
pages = {771-788},
volume = {88},
issue = {3},
month = {7},
id = {91314056-93a1-3c0e-9b21-1ab321923fc5},
created = {2019-09-05T19:09:30.715Z},
file_attached = {true},
profile_id = {9c1a1cb0-c1b7-3e07-a4a9-3deaea66e1b7},
group_id = {c38dcf34-fa27-380f-93ef-2c3ab1ee926b},
last_modified = {2019-10-04T14:14:06.604Z},
read = {false},
starred = {false},
authored = {false},
confirmed = {true},
hidden = {false},
private_publication = {false},
abstract = {We provide an overview of the use of, and management measures for, circle hooks
in various marine fisheries of the United States. Circle hooks have long been known
for their conservation benefits, such as reducing deep hooking, and therefore,
reducing post-release mortality associated with this event. Some US commercial
pelagic longline vessels voluntarily started using circle hooks due to increased
catch rates for some target species and increased post-release survival of non-target
species, whereas recreational anglers began using circle hooks to reduce post-release
mortality in catch-and-release fisheries. Despite previous voluntary circle hook use,
circle hooks have been a relatively new fishery management tool in US state and
federal fisheries. However, the difference in jurisdiction between state and federal
waters has resulted in some disparity in state and federal circle hook regulations.
In general, consistent management regulations between state and federal waters
should be more beneficial for fish stocks that have both state and federal fisheries.
Finally, while state and federal circle hook regulations are documented, voluntary
circle hook use by commercial and recreational fishers participating in different
state and federal fisheries is more difficult to characterize. Thus, overall circle hook
use is difficult to quantify.},
bibtype = {misc},
author = {Wilson, Jacqueline A. and Diaz, Guillermo A.},
doi = {10.5343/bms.2011.1061}
}
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However, the difference in jurisdiction between state and federal\r\nwaters has resulted in some disparity in state and federal circle hook regulations.\r\nIn general, consistent management regulations between state and federal waters\r\nshould be more beneficial for fish stocks that have both state and federal fisheries.\r\nFinally, while state and federal circle hook regulations are documented, voluntary\r\ncircle hook use by commercial and recreational fishers participating in different\r\nstate and federal fisheries is more difficult to characterize. Thus, overall circle hook\r\nuse is difficult to quantify.","bibtype":"misc","author":"Wilson, Jacqueline A. and Diaz, Guillermo A.","doi":"10.5343/bms.2011.1061","bibtex":"@misc{\n title = {An overview of circle hook use and management measures in UNITED ST ATES marine fisheries},\n type = {misc},\n year = {2012},\n source = {Bulletin of Marine Science},\n pages = {771-788},\n volume = {88},\n issue = {3},\n month = {7},\n id = {91314056-93a1-3c0e-9b21-1ab321923fc5},\n created = {2019-09-05T19:09:30.715Z},\n file_attached = {true},\n profile_id = {9c1a1cb0-c1b7-3e07-a4a9-3deaea66e1b7},\n group_id = {c38dcf34-fa27-380f-93ef-2c3ab1ee926b},\n last_modified = {2019-10-04T14:14:06.604Z},\n read = {false},\n starred = {false},\n authored = {false},\n confirmed = {true},\n hidden = {false},\n private_publication = {false},\n abstract = {We provide an overview of the use of, and management measures for, circle hooks\r\nin various marine fisheries of the United States. 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However, the difference in jurisdiction between state and federal\r\nwaters has resulted in some disparity in state and federal circle hook regulations.\r\nIn general, consistent management regulations between state and federal waters\r\nshould be more beneficial for fish stocks that have both state and federal fisheries.\r\nFinally, while state and federal circle hook regulations are documented, voluntary\r\ncircle hook use by commercial and recreational fishers participating in different\r\nstate and federal fisheries is more difficult to characterize. 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