Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Life Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

William & Mary

2019

Sea scallop fishery

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Georges Bank Yellowtail Flounder Estimates From Vims Industry-Based Scallop Dredge Surveys Of Closed Area Ii And Surrounds, Sally Roman, David Rudders Sep 2019

Georges Bank Yellowtail Flounder Estimates From Vims Industry-Based Scallop Dredge Surveys Of Closed Area Ii And Surrounds, Sally Roman, David Rudders

Reports

This document is the final report submitted to the New England Fishery Management Council (NEFMC) for the Georges Bank Yellowtail Flounder Estimates from VIMS Industry-Based Scallop Dredge Surveys of Closed Area II and Surrounds project. The NEFMC funded this project in April 2019, with an objective of synthesizing existing VIMS dredge survey data with respect to the Georges Bank stock of yellowtail flounder (Limanda ferruginea). Analysis consisted of an examination of existing catch data from VIMS dredge surveys of Georges Bank Closed Area II and surrounds from 2005 to 2019.


Results For The 2019 Vims Industry Cooperative Surveys Of The Mid-Atlantic, Nantucket Lightship Closed Area, Closed Area I, And Closed Area Ii Resource Areas, David Rudders, Sally Roman, Erin Mohr, Kaitlyn Clark Sep 2019

Results For The 2019 Vims Industry Cooperative Surveys Of The Mid-Atlantic, Nantucket Lightship Closed Area, Closed Area I, And Closed Area Ii Resource Areas, David Rudders, Sally Roman, Erin Mohr, Kaitlyn Clark

Reports

The Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) conducted high resolution sea scallop dredge surveys of the entire Mid-Atlantic (MAB), the Nantucket Lightship (NLCA), Closed Area I (CAI), and Closed Area II (CAII) during May–July 2019. These surveys were funded by the Sea Scallop Research Set- Aside Program (RSA). Exploitable biomass for each survey is shown in Table 1 for each spatially explicit SAMS Area (Scallop Area Management Simulator). SAMS Areas represent management relevant spatial subunits of the resource and explicitly account for differences in recruitment, vital rates, and fishing effort in the forward projection of survey information. Maps of SAMS …


A Study To Assess The Effect Of Tow Duration And Estimate Dredge Efficiency For The Vims Sea Scallop Dredge Survey : Final Report, David Rudders, Sally Roman, Arthur Trembanis, Danielle Ferraro May 2019

A Study To Assess The Effect Of Tow Duration And Estimate Dredge Efficiency For The Vims Sea Scallop Dredge Survey : Final Report, David Rudders, Sally Roman, Arthur Trembanis, Danielle Ferraro

Reports

For the sea scallop, Placopecten magellanicus, the concepts of space and time have emerged as the basis of an effective management tool. The strategy of closing or limiting activities in certain areas for specific lengths of time has gained support as a method to conserve and enhance the sea scallop resource. In the last decade, rotational area management has provided a mechanism to protect juvenile scallops from fishing mortality by closing areas based upon scallop abundance and age distribution. Approximately half of the sea scallop industry’s current annual landings come from areas under this rotational harvest strategy. While this represents …


An Investigation Into The Scallop Parasite Outbreak On The Mid-Atlantic Shelf: Transmission Pathways, Spatio-Temporal Variation Of Infection And Consequences To Marketability : Final Report, David Rudders, Sally Roman, Robert A. Fisher, David Bushek, Daphne Munroe, Eleanor A. Bochenek, Emily Mcgurk, Sarah Borsetti May 2019

An Investigation Into The Scallop Parasite Outbreak On The Mid-Atlantic Shelf: Transmission Pathways, Spatio-Temporal Variation Of Infection And Consequences To Marketability : Final Report, David Rudders, Sally Roman, Robert A. Fisher, David Bushek, Daphne Munroe, Eleanor A. Bochenek, Emily Mcgurk, Sarah Borsetti

Reports

A disease epizootic has developed that threatens one of the most valuable fisheries in the US. The U.S. sea scallop (Placopecten magellanicus) fishery landed $512 million worth of scallop meats in 2017 (NMFS, 2018). This fishery is based on landings of scallop adductor muscles only, with the remainder of the scallop discarded at sea (NEFSC, 2018). During the spring of 2015 both industry and scientific assessment crews noted unprecedented numbers of a parasitic nematode in the adductor muscle of captured scallops (Figure 1). The presence of the parasite in the adductor muscle is expressed through macroscopic lesions, or cysts. These …