Evaluation of groundfish and shrimp annual multidisciplinary survey in the Estuary and northern Gulf of St. Lawrence (CCGS Cabot 2022 - current)

Evaluation of groundfish and shrimp annual multidisciplinary survey in the Estuary and northern Gulf of St. Lawrence (CCGS Cabot 2022 - current) Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) conducts an annual multidisciplinary scientific survey with a bottom trawl in the Estuary and the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence since 1978. Over the years this survey has been conducted on five vessels: the MV Gadus Atlantica (1978-1994), the MV Lady Hammond (1984-1990), the CCGS Alfred Needler (1990-2005), the CCGS Teleost (2004-2022) and the CCGS Cabot (2022-current). It is important to note that the objectives, the methods used and the identification of the species during these surveys have improved over time in response to DFO requests and mandates. The data are therefore not directly comparable between these surveys. The specificities of the missions onboard the CCGS Cabot are described below. Objectives: 1. Assess groundfish and northern shrimp population abundance and condition 2. Assess environmental conditions 3. Inventory species biodiversity 4. Assess phytoplankton and mesozooplankton abundance 5. Monitor the pelagic ecosystem 6. Inventory marine mammals populations 7. Inventory seabirds populations 8. Collect samples for various research projects Survey description The survey covers the Estuary and the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence, that is the divisions 4R, 4S and the northern part of division 4T of the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO). Since 2008, coverage of division 4T has been increased in the upstream part of the Lower Estuary. A stratified random sampling strategy is used for this survey and the area of the study area is 118,587 km². The fishing gear used on the CCGS Cabot is a four-sided Campelen 1800 shrimp trawl equipped with a Rockhopper footgear (“bicycle”). The trawl lengthening and codend are equipped with a 12.7-mm knotless nylon lining. Standard trawling tows last 15 minutes, starting from the time the trawl touches the sea floor. The aimed towing speed is 3 knots. Data For each fishing tow, the catch is sorted and weighed by taxa; individual are then count and biological data are then collected on a subsample. For fish, crab and squid, size and weight are gathered by individual and, for some species, sex, gonad maturity, and the weight of certain organs (stomach, liver, gonads) are also evaluated. The soft rays of the anal fin are counted for redfish, and the otoliths are sampled for several species such as Atlantic cod, Atlantic halibut, and witch flounder. A roughly 2-kg shrimp sample is sorted and weighed by species (and by stage of maturity for northern shrimp). The shrimps are measured individually. The other invertebrates are counted (no individual measurements) and photographed. The catches per tow for fish taxa are available below. The latest published data is preliminary and will be updated in January of the following year. This data is also available via the 'Biodiversity' application on the St. Lawrence Global Observatory (SLGO). For more information please contact the data management team (gddaiss-dmsaisb@dfo-mpo.gc.ca). 2024-02-23 Fisheries and Oceans Canada gddaiss-dmsaisb@dfo-mpo.gc.ca Nature and EnvironmentScience and TechnologySt. Lawrence EstuaryGulf of St. LawrenceGroundfish; Shrimp; Multidisciplinary survey; CabotOceansMarine biologyFishAquatic wildlifeFisheries managementAquatic ecosystems Data DictionnaryCSV https://api-proxy.edh.azure.cloud.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/catalogue/records/7001783a-4dc0-41bc-8932-1dae1e699d91/attachments/data_dictionnary.csv John Cabot datasetCSV https://api-proxy.edh.azure.cloud.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/catalogue/records/7001783a-4dc0-41bc-8932-1dae1e699d91/attachments/donnees%20John%20Cabot.csv John Cabot datasetCSV https://api-proxy.edh.azure.cloud.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/catalogue/records/7001783a-4dc0-41bc-8932-1dae1e699d91/attachments/John%20Cabot%20dataset.csv Cabot Map DataESRI REST https://gisp.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/arcgis/rest/services/FGP/Evaluation_groundfish_shrimp_survey_Estuary_NGulf_St_Lawrence_Cabot/MapServer Cabot Map DataESRI REST https://gisp.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/arcgis/rest/services/FGP/Evaluation_groundfish_shrimp_survey_Estuary_NGulf_St_Lawrence_Cabot/MapServer

Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) conducts an annual multidisciplinary scientific survey with a bottom trawl in the Estuary and the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence since 1978. Over the years this survey has been conducted on five vessels: the MV Gadus Atlantica (1978-1994), the MV Lady Hammond (1984-1990), the CCGS Alfred Needler (1990-2005), the CCGS Teleost (2004-2022) and the CCGS Cabot (2022-current). It is important to note that the objectives, the methods used and the identification of the species during these surveys have improved over time in response to DFO requests and mandates. The data are therefore not directly comparable between these surveys. The specificities of the missions onboard the CCGS Cabot are described below.

Objectives:

  1. Assess groundfish and northern shrimp population abundance and condition

  2. Assess environmental conditions

  3. Inventory species biodiversity

  4. Assess phytoplankton and mesozooplankton abundance

  5. Monitor the pelagic ecosystem

  6. Inventory marine mammals populations

  7. Inventory seabirds populations

  8. Collect samples for various research projects

Survey description

The survey covers the Estuary and the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence, that is the divisions 4R, 4S and the northern part of division 4T of the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO). Since 2008, coverage of division 4T has been increased in the upstream part of the Lower Estuary. A stratified random sampling strategy is used for this survey and the area of the study area is 118,587 km². The fishing gear used on the CCGS Cabot is a four-sided Campelen 1800 shrimp trawl equipped with a Rockhopper footgear (“bicycle”). The trawl lengthening and codend are equipped with a 12.7-mm knotless nylon lining. Standard trawling tows last 15 minutes, starting from the time the trawl touches the sea floor. The aimed towing speed is 3 knots.

Data

For each fishing tow, the catch is sorted and weighed by taxa; individual are then count and biological data are then

collected on a subsample. For fish, crab and squid, size and weight are gathered by individual and, for some species, sex, gonad maturity, and the weight of certain organs (stomach, liver, gonads) are also evaluated. The soft rays of the anal fin are counted for redfish, and the otoliths are sampled for several species such as Atlantic cod, Atlantic halibut, and witch flounder. A roughly 2-kg shrimp sample is sorted and weighed by species (and by stage of maturity for northern shrimp). The shrimps are measured individually. The other invertebrates are counted (no individual measurements) and photographed.

The catches per tow for fish taxa are available below. The latest published data is preliminary and will be updated in January of the following year. This data is also available via the 'Biodiversity' application on the St. Lawrence Global Observatory (SLGO). For more information please contact the data management team (gddaiss-dmsaisb@dfo-mpo.gc.ca).

Data and Resources

Contact Information

Delivery Point: 850, route de la Mer, P.O. Box 1000

City: Mont-Joli

Administrative Area: Quebec

Postal Code: G5H 3Z4

Country: Canada

Electronic Mail Address: gddaiss-dmsaisb@dfo-mpo.gc.ca

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