TY - JOUR
T1 - Catching carp
T2 - a review of bigheaded carp capture strategies
AU - Lederman, Nathan J.
AU - Collins, Scott F.
AU - Hammen, Jeremy J.
AU - Parkos, Joseph J.
N1 - We thank the many biologists, technicians, interns, managers, researchers, and support staff whose collective efforts made this manuscript possible. Duane Chapman (USGS), Kevin Irons (IDNR), and Jason Goeckler (USFWS) are thanked for their advice and insights during the development of this manuscript. Additionally, we thank the anonymous reviewers who constructively reviewed and improved this manuscript.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - We conducted a review to summarize the settings, configurations, and capture data for an array of fisheries gear types used to capture invasive bigheaded carps (Hypophthalmichthys spp.) in North America. The goal of this paper was to synthesize patterns of bigheaded carp catch data across various gear types and capture methods. Data consisted of bigheaded carps captured among a variety of riverine habitats where their populations are well-established (e.g., lower pools of the Illinois River), as well as near the leading edge of their invasion front (e.g., Upper Mississippi, Upper Illinois, Upper Missouri, Red River). Our synthesis provides a summary of (1) capture gears and their settings/configurations, (2) catches (fish size, number captured, precision of estimates), and (3) assessment of gears that were robust (i.e., high precision, low cost, high catch, sample many habitat types) in riverine environments and impoundments. Across the 26 gear types used to target bigheaded carps, catch rates of silver carp were consistently higher than bighead carp, which may result from a combination of sampling inefficiencies, sampling biases, and spatial dynamics of their invasions. Gear performance matrices combining catch rate, precision, and labor cost indicated that DC electrofishing and herding fish into gill nets and/or trammel nets were the top-ranked capture methods. This review provides guidance for the development of detection, monitoring, and control programs that target bigheaded carp species, as well as identifies future research to fill critical data gaps.
AB - We conducted a review to summarize the settings, configurations, and capture data for an array of fisheries gear types used to capture invasive bigheaded carps (Hypophthalmichthys spp.) in North America. The goal of this paper was to synthesize patterns of bigheaded carp catch data across various gear types and capture methods. Data consisted of bigheaded carps captured among a variety of riverine habitats where their populations are well-established (e.g., lower pools of the Illinois River), as well as near the leading edge of their invasion front (e.g., Upper Mississippi, Upper Illinois, Upper Missouri, Red River). Our synthesis provides a summary of (1) capture gears and their settings/configurations, (2) catches (fish size, number captured, precision of estimates), and (3) assessment of gears that were robust (i.e., high precision, low cost, high catch, sample many habitat types) in riverine environments and impoundments. Across the 26 gear types used to target bigheaded carps, catch rates of silver carp were consistently higher than bighead carp, which may result from a combination of sampling inefficiencies, sampling biases, and spatial dynamics of their invasions. Gear performance matrices combining catch rate, precision, and labor cost indicated that DC electrofishing and herding fish into gill nets and/or trammel nets were the top-ranked capture methods. This review provides guidance for the development of detection, monitoring, and control programs that target bigheaded carp species, as well as identifies future research to fill critical data gaps.
KW - catch rate
KW - fisheries science
KW - gear precision
KW - invasive species
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85192796377&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.3391/mbi.2024.15.1.02
DO - 10.3391/mbi.2024.15.1.02
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85192796377
SN - 1989-8649
VL - 15
SP - 21
EP - 40
JO - Management of Biological Invasions
JF - Management of Biological Invasions
IS - 1
ER -