Innovative Vibrating Hydraulic Dredge for Striped Venus (Chamelea gallina) Fishing

This work proposes the experimentation of an innovative hydraulic dredge for clam fishing (Chamelea gallina) in the Adriatic Sea (Italy). This innovative gear aimed at increasing the selectivity of the typical hydraulic dredge used currently, while at the same reducing the impact on benthos through...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:AgriEngineering Vol. 4; no. 1; pp. 1 - 16
Main Authors: Mascilongo, Giuseppina, Costa, Corrado, Chatzievangelou, Damianos, Pochi, Daniele, Fanigliulo, Roberto, Di Giacinto, Federica, Di Renzo, Ludovica, Giansante, Carla, Ferri, Nicola, D'Alterio, Nicola, Costa, Claudio, Bianchini, Marco L.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Basel MDPI AG 01-01-2022
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Summary:This work proposes the experimentation of an innovative hydraulic dredge for clam fishing (Chamelea gallina) in the Adriatic Sea (Italy). This innovative gear aimed at increasing the selectivity of the typical hydraulic dredge used currently, while at the same reducing the impact on benthos through the conception, installation, and experimentation of innovative technological solutions, consisting mainly of a vibrating bottom panel on the dredge and a “warning device” on the dredge mouth. Comparative experiments of the traditional vs. the modified gear, employing two boats fishing in parallel on the northern coast of Abruzzi (Adriatic Sea) and contrasting the catch with both paired comparisons and through modelling, showed that the innovative hydraulic dredge retains fewer undersize clams while yielding similar amounts of commercial product, moreover of higher quality; at the same time, it takes on board less discard, and catches significantly less vagile fauna. In short, the innovative gear is gaining five times over a list of six parameters considered as positive and/or advantageous for the clam fishery. The results allow proposals of potential improvements to clam-fishing instruments to make the selection processes more effective while promoting a lower impacting fishery, which is essential for clam management.
ISSN:2624-7402
2624-7402
DOI:10.3390/agriengineering4010001