2 Longline Sampling Programme
The iki database was initially designed for the data collected by
the longline sampling programme targeting snapper (Pagrus auratus)
for the "iki jume" market. The measuring takes place on
board vessels, and is representative of that portion of the catch
that is caught. Initial data loaded into the iki database, were
collected by technical staff engaged by NIWA Auckland, for the period
from December 1997 to September 1998. This initial data loaded were
collected on snapper caught by the iki longline fishery. However, the
use of the iki database is not restricted to the iki snapper longline
fishery.
Subsequent data loaded into this database have included catch
sampling data from the snapper target fishery using longlines,
trawls, and danish seines.
The nucleus of the iki database is a unit of effort and its
associated catch, where a unit of effort is a longline set, one
trawl, or one danish seine. Each unit of effort is allocated an
effort number, commencing from one on the first unit of effort of the
trip; each subsequent unit of effort follows sequentially.
From each unit of effort, the associated catch information is
recorded for each fish caught as it is landed. For the initial
sampling programme, these data are recorded on a page-by-page basis,
with a maximum of 60 fish per page. Each page of a sets "LONGLINE
FISH CHARACTERISATION
RECORD" data, acts as a sampling
sub-unit, covering the time period taken to haul the section of the
line on board and the sampling of the fish from that section of the
line. This is to allow analysis of the fish characteristics, (a
record of the status of the fish and various condition data),
according to the time elapsed since set hauling commenced.
Biological data other than length were not collected for the
initial data loaded. Due to the nature of the snapper iki fishery,
cutting of fish is not possible; hence there is no requirement to
collect sex data from that fishery. The form and database allow for
sex to be recorded and is included to allow for the contingency of
sexing fish should it be needed.
The highest economic value of snapper is obtained when fish are
landed alive and killed by the "iki jume" method. Snapper
boated dead suffer a rapid decrease in flesh quality, making them
unsuitable for the export market. Reducing incidental mortality in
larger size classes may therefore increase overall catch value. In
longline fishing, lip-hooked snapper are generally landed alive,
whereas fish ingest the hook ("gut-hook") are more likely
to die as a result of damage to the gills or viscera. Trials have
indicated that the incidence of gut-hooking in longline-caught
snapper can be substantially reduced by using hooks modified by the
addition of a wire appendage. Trials with modified hooks of varying
sizes and with a variety of baits were conducted in the Hauraki Gulf
in 1999, and there results of this experiment were stored into the
iki database.