Trawling
Trawling is a commercial fishing technique that employs a large, funnel-shaped net, known as a trawl, towed behind one or more vessels through the water or along the seafloor to capture schools of fish and other aquatic species.[1][2] The method encompasses bottom trawling, which targets demersal species near the seabed by maintaining net contact with the substrate, and midwater or pelagic trawling, which pursues free-swimming schools in the water column without bottom disturbance.[3][4] Originating in medieval Europe around the 14th century with beam trawls, the practice industrialized in the 19th century through steam-powered vessels and otter trawls, enabling vastly expanded catches and global dissemination.[5][6] Bottom trawling, the dominant form, supplies approximately 25% of global marine fisheries landings, contributing substantially to human protein intake and coastal economies, though its efficiency has led to widespread adoption in regions from the North Atlantic to Southeast Asia.[7][8] Despite these benefits, trawling faces scrutiny for ecological consequences, including physical disruption of benthic habitats, elevated bycatch of non-target species, and potential long-term alterations to marine biodiversity and food webs.[9][10] Peer-reviewed analyses indicate that while acute effects like sediment resuspension and biogenic structure destruction occur, the magnitude of broader impacts such as carbon sequestration loss or community recovery remains debated, with some evidence suggesting resilience in heavily fished areas and minimal net contribution to global emissions compared to land-based agriculture.[9][11] Regulations, including gear modifications and spatial closures, aim to mitigate these pressures, yet enforcement varies, underscoring ongoing tensions between productivity and sustainability.[12]History
Origins and Early Development
Bottom trawling emerged in medieval England during the mid-14th century, marking the initial development of a method involving the dragging of a conical net along the seabed to capture demersal fish and shellfish. This technique, primarily executed via beam trawls—where a rigid wooden beam maintained the net's opening while being towed by one or more small sailing boats—represented an advancement over earlier stationary or hand-lining practices, allowing for more efficient harvesting of bottom-dwelling species. Historical records from coastal communities in eastern England, such as Essex and Kent, provide the earliest documented evidence of this gear's deployment around 1350, often by professional fishers targeting flatfish and other benthic resources in shallow inshore waters.[13] By 1376, the introduction of beam trawling had already sparked significant opposition, as evidenced by a petition from Essex fishers to King Edward III seeking its prohibition on grounds of environmental damage, including the uprooting of seabed vegetation and capture of immature fish that threatened stock sustainability. Despite such early regulatory challenges and periodic local bans, the practice persisted intermittently across southern and eastern England through the 15th to 17th centuries, with archaeological and textual sources confirming sporadic use in beam configurations adapted to regional vessel types and tidal conditions. This era's trawling remained artisanal and geographically limited, reliant on manual hauling and sail power, contrasting with later mechanized expansions.[13] Similar beam trawling methods appeared concurrently in other parts of Europe, including France around 1370, where coastal fishers employed comparable drag nets from small boats, though documentation is sparser and often intertwined with broader medieval fishing innovations. In the Low Countries and northern France, early modern accounts describe beam trawls towed by rowed or sailed vessels in estuarine and nearshore zones, facilitating catches of sole, plaice, and shrimp but frequently encountering resistance from hook-and-line fishers over perceived overexploitation. These pre-industrial applications laid foundational techniques for net design and deployment, emphasizing weighted doors or beams to ensure seabed contact, yet remained constrained by labor-intensive operations and vulnerability to weather, setting the stage for 19th-century steam-powered industrialization.[5]Industrialization and Global Expansion
The industrialization of trawling accelerated in the mid-19th century with the adoption of steam power, enabling vessels to operate farther offshore and haul larger nets more efficiently than sail-powered boats. The first steam trawler, Enterprize, was constructed in Granton, Scotland, in 1854 by J. & M.W. Ruthven, marking a pivotal shift from labor-intensive beam trawling to mechanized operations.[14] By 1881, purpose-built British steam trawlers were in use, capable of landing four times the fish per trip compared to contemporary sailing smacks, which spurred rapid fleet modernization in ports like Hull and Grimsby.[5] This technological leap facilitated expansion beyond Europe, with steam trawling reaching the Pacific Coast of the United States by the 1880s, where it supplanted earlier two-boat paranzella methods introduced in 1876.[6] In New England, steam-powered otter trawlers emerged around 1900, transforming groundfish harvests by allowing year-round operations independent of wind and tide.[15] The transition to internal combustion engines in the early 20th century further boosted efficiency, with diesel-powered vessels dominating by the 1930s and enabling factory trawlers that processed catches at sea.[16] Global proliferation intensified post-World War II, as subsidized fleets extended trawling into distant waters, increasing the proportion of ocean area fished from 60% in 1950 to over 90% by the late 20th century.[17] Bottom trawling effort surged in the second half of the century, driven by demand for demersal species and supported by international aid in developing regions; for instance, inshore trawling was introduced to Southeast Asia's Straits of Malacca in the early 1960s via Japanese technical assistance, leading to rapid landings growth to 1.7 million tonnes of finfish by 2002.[18][19] Worldwide, marine fishing fleets—including substantial trawler components—doubled from 1.7 million vessels in 1950 to 3.7 million by 2015, with Asia's share rising as European dominance waned.[20] Deep-sea bottom trawling also expanded, with reconstructed FAO capture data revealing catches from depths beyond 200 meters increasing through targeted gear adaptations in fleets from Norway to the North Atlantic.[21] This era's growth reflected causal drivers like fuel-efficient propulsion and onboard freezing, though it strained stocks in unexploited areas previously inaccessible to smaller-scale fisheries.[22]Methods and Techniques
Bottom Trawling
Bottom trawling employs a cone-shaped net towed along the seabed to capture demersal species such as groundfish, flatfish, shrimp, and crabs that inhabit or forage near the ocean floor.[3][1] The net maintains bottom contact to herd fish into the path, with towing speeds typically ranging from 2 to 6 knots depending on gear design and target species.[23] The primary variants differ in how the net's horizontal opening is achieved: otter trawls, beam trawls, and pair trawls. In otter trawling, large hydrodynamic boards known as otter boards or trawl doors are attached via sweeps or bridles to the net's sides, spreading it open through water pressure and vessel motion; this allows flexibility in uneven terrain and is the most common method globally.[1][24] Beam trawling uses a rigid metal beam to hold the mouth open, enabling precise control over height above the bottom and suiting smoother seabeds or flatfish targeting, though it requires heavier gear.[1] Pair trawling involves two vessels towing a single net, eliminating doors for wider coverage and reduced fuel use in some configurations.[1] Key gear components include the headline (upper edge with floats for buoyancy), footrope (lower edge weighted or fitted with rollers like rockhoppers to navigate obstacles), and codend (terminal bag for retaining catch).[3][1] Operations commence with deploying the net from the vessel, followed by towing until sufficient catch accumulates, then hauling aboard; adjustments for depth and substrate via winches and sensors optimize performance.[1] Modern systems incorporate acoustic sensors and GPS for precise path monitoring.[25]Midwater Trawling
Midwater trawling, also known as pelagic trawling, deploys a large conical net towed through the water column at mid-depths to encircle and capture schools of fish that inhabit the pelagic zone, distinct from bottom-dwelling species. The technique relies on acoustic detection via sonar or echo sounders to locate dense aggregations, with the net positioned to avoid seabed contact, typically at depths ranging from surface layers to several hundred meters.[26][27] The net features a tapered body composed of four panels converging into a codend for retaining catch, augmented by forward-extending lateral wings that funnel fish toward the opening; vertical aperture is maintained by buoyant headline floats, while horizontal spread is achieved through otter boards or hydrodynamic doors exerting outward pressure. Towing speeds generally range from 3 to 5 knots, with single or pair-trawl configurations allowing vessels to herd schools effectively.[28][29] Primary target species include schooling pelagic fish such as herring, mackerel, anchovies, capelin, and tuna, as well as cephalopods like squid; these species aggregate in midwater layers, making them amenable to en masse capture without substrate reliance. In regions like the Northeast Atlantic and Pacific, midwater trawls account for significant harvests of small pelagic forage fish, supporting reduction fisheries for meal and oil.[30][31] This method emerged prominently in the mid-20th century, building on post-World War II advancements in echo-sounding technology that revealed off-bottom fish traces, prompting gear innovations like the Cobb midwater trawl in the early 1960s for targeted sampling. U.S. Bureau of Commercial Fisheries experiments in 1961 aboard vessels such as the RV Delaware validated midwater designs for commercial viability, transitioning from earlier beam and otter trawls adapted for bottom use since the late 1800s.[32][33][34] Globally, pelagic trawling contributes around 10% of wild capture production, equating to tens of millions of tonnes annually when aggregated with other midwater methods, though exact figures vary by year and region per FAO assessments. Unlike bottom trawling, it minimizes physical disruption to seafloor habitats and benthic communities, though challenges persist with bycatch of non-target species including marine mammals and seabirds, mitigated variably through escape panels or time-area closures.[19][35][36]Specialized Variants
Beam trawling maintains the net's horizontal opening using a rigid wooden or steel beam rather than otter boards, enabling the trawl to skim closer to the seabed and target flatfish or other low-swimming demersal species on even terrains like sand or mud. This variant reduces hydrodynamic drag from boards but requires heavier vessels for stability, with beam lengths typically ranging from 4 to 15 meters depending on net size.[37][38] Pair trawling deploys a single large net towed between two vessels, eliminating otter boards to allow wider mouth openings—up to 100 meters or more—and higher towing speeds, which suits both bottom and midwater operations for schools of fish like mackerel or hake. The technique demands precise coordination between boats to maintain net shape, with warp lengths adjusted via winches for depth control, and it has been documented in global fleets since the mid-20th century for increased efficiency over single-vessel trawling.[1][37] Twin-rig or double-rig trawling, common in shrimp fisheries, rigs two smaller otter trawls side-by-side from one vessel using outrigger booms and split warps, doubling catch volume while preserving vessel stability and fuel efficiency compared to a single large net. Footropes are often fitted with roller gear to navigate uneven bottoms, and this setup prevails in the Gulf of Mexico where shrimp landings exceed 100,000 metric tons annually via such methods.[39][40] Krill trawling employs customized midwater nets with fine mesh (1-2 mm) and reinforced codends to retain small euphausiids, towed at depths of 10-200 meters in swarms detected by echosounders, as in Antarctic fisheries yielding over 300,000 metric tons yearly. Adaptations include low headline heights for dense aggregations and escape windows to minimize bycatch of fish like myctophids, with model tests confirming hydrodynamic efficiencies in scale trials.[41][42]Equipment and Technology
Net Components and Design
Trawl nets consist of a cone-shaped body formed by sewing together two, four, or more panels of synthetic netting material, such as polyethylene or nylon twine, to create a funnel that tapers into a closed codend for retaining the catch.[43][44] The forward opening, or mouth, of the net is extended by lateral wings that facilitate herding of fish into the net.[45] The headline, a rope fitted with floats or hydrovanes, runs along the upper edge of the mouth to provide buoyancy and maintain vertical opening, while the footrope along the lower edge is weighted or equipped with rollers and chains for seabed contact in bottom trawls.[3][46] Horizontal spreading is achieved via otter boards, also known as trawl doors, which are hydrodynamic steel or wooden panels attached to the vessel's towing warps and connected to the net wings by sweeps and bridles.[47][48] The net body comprises forward sections with larger mesh sizes in the wings and square panels to encourage fish passage into the tapering belly, followed by the codend with smaller meshes to retain target species.[35] Designs vary by seam count, such as two-seam or four-seam constructions, influencing the net's hydrodynamic profile and herding efficiency.[49][50] In midwater trawls, the design omits heavy ground gear, relying on buoyancy elements for pelagic operation, whereas bottom trawls incorporate rock-hopper or flat ground gear to navigate uneven seabeds.[43][3] Net dimensions, such as headline length up to 100 meters and mesh sizes regulated per fishery, are optimized for target species behavior and depth.[51][52]Vessel Requirements
Trawlers, the vessels employed in trawling operations, must be engineered to withstand the substantial hydrodynamic and seabed forces generated by towing heavy nets. Designs emphasize structural integrity, with reinforced hulls and keels to endure repeated impacts from ground gear, particularly in bottom trawling. Propulsion systems are calibrated to provide sufficient thrust, ranging from outboard engines on small craft to diesel main engines delivering up to 8,000 horsepower on large vessels, enabling tow speeds of 1 to 7 knots against net drag.[53] Vessel sizes span small undecked boats under 10 meters for coastal fisheries to ocean-going factory trawlers exceeding 100 meters in length and 3,000 gross tons displacement, accommodating extended voyages and onboard processing. Small trawlers, typically 5.2 to 8.5 meters with V-bottom hulls of planked or plywood construction, suit nearshore pair or single-boat operations, while larger stern trawlers incorporate bulbous bows for fuel efficiency and stability during asymmetric towing loads.[53][54] Deck layouts feature essential machinery including hydraulic trawl winches positioned aft for warp control, gilson winches with lifting tackles for net retrieval, and gallows or derricks to support otter boards and doors weighing several tons. Stability criteria demand a low center of gravity and adequate righting arms to counteract heeling moments from off-center tow points and heavy deck loads, as assessed through intact stability calculations ensuring positive dynamic stability up to 60 degrees heel in worst-case scenarios.[55] Additional requirements encompass fish storage capacities via insulated holds or freezing systems, crew accommodations scaled to voyage duration, and navigation electronics for precise positioning, with larger vessels often including dynamic positioning aids to maintain gear deployment in adverse conditions. Compliance with international standards, such as those from the FAO and IMO, mandates watertight integrity, bilge pumping, and fire suppression to mitigate risks inherent to fuel-intensive operations.[53]Technological Innovations
The otter trawl, a pivotal innovation replacing rigid beam trawls, emerged in the late 1890s through experiments by British fishermen such as Robert Muirhead Hewett, utilizing hydrodynamic "otter boards" to maintain net mouth opening via vessel tow rather than fixed beams, enabling larger nets and deeper fishing with steam-powered vessels.[56][57] This design, patented and commercialized around 1900, increased catch efficiency by allowing scalable net sizes up to 100 meters wide, fundamentally scaling industrial trawling.[58] Acoustic technologies transformed trawling detection capabilities starting in the 1930s, with early echo sounders adapted from naval sonar for depth measurement and fish school location; commercial fish-finding variants proliferated post-World War II, using frequencies around 20-50 kHz to map pelagic layers and avoid empty hauls.[59] By the 1970s, forward-looking net sonars and multibeam systems enabled real-time monitoring of net position and approaching fish, reducing fuel waste; modern iterations, like Simrad's 2025 third-wire trawl sensors employing multiple frequencies for 3D net profiling, integrate with vessel navigation for precise deployment.[60][61] Onboard net sensors, introduced commercially in the 1980s and advanced through systems like Scantrol's Autotrawl (operational since circa 1994), provide acoustic and wired telemetry for metrics including headline height, door spread (typically 50-100 meters), and catch volume, allowing automatic winch adjustments to optimize geometry and minimize seabed contact.[62][63] Recent integrations, such as NOAA's 2024 Adjustable Multi-Function Trawl equipped with depth, flow, and temperature sensors, enable multi-species sampling across depths up to 1,000 meters in a single tow, cutting survey costs by 30-50% via efficient data collection.[64][65] Emerging AI-driven systems, exemplified by Smartrawl's 2024 deployment of camera-gate hardware on nets, use machine vision to detect and release bycatch in real-time, potentially reducing discards by up to 60% in bottom trawls while maintaining target yields.[66] Uncrewed surface vessels paired with sensor-laden warps, tested in Nova Scotia in 2024, automate towing for smaller operations, minimizing crew exposure and fuel use through depth-altimeter feedback loops.[67] These advancements, often validated in peer-reviewed trials, prioritize empirical performance metrics like selectivity and energy efficiency over unverified sustainability claims.[68]Economic and Social Role
Contribution to Global Fisheries Production
Trawling, encompassing both bottom and midwater variants, accounts for approximately 35 percent of global marine fish catch, making it one of the dominant methods in capture fisheries production. Bottom trawling alone contributes around 26 percent of marine landings, equating to roughly 21 million tonnes annually based on 2022 global marine capture production of 81 million tonnes.[9][69] Midwater trawling adds an estimated 10 percent, primarily targeting pelagic species such as herring, mackerel, and capelin.[19] These figures derive from reconstructed catch databases that address gaps in official reporting, as the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) does not routinely disaggregate production by gear type in primary statistics.[19] This production volume underpins supply chains for key commercial species, including demersal fish like cod, haddock, and Alaska pollock, as well as crustaceans such as shrimp and prawns, which constitute a substantial portion of trawled catches. In 2022, total global capture fisheries production reached 92.3 million tonnes, with trawling's share supporting industrial-scale processing and export markets valued in tens of billions of dollars.[69] Regions with high trawling intensity, such as the Northeast Atlantic and Northwest Pacific, rely on it for over 50 percent of their fisheries output, enabling efficient harvesting of dense fish aggregations that other gears cannot match at scale.[19] Despite stable overall capture production trends, trawling's contribution has remained consistent over decades, reflecting adaptations in fleet efficiency rather than expansion in effort. Empirical assessments indicate that without trawling, global demersal fish supply would decline sharply, as alternative gears like hooks and lines yield lower volumes for bottom-dwelling stocks.[9] However, discard rates—estimated at 36 percent for demersal trawls—complicate net production metrics, with unreported discards potentially reducing effective yield by several million tonnes annually.[70] Trawling thus sustains a critical baseline for wild-caught seafood, comprising about 25 percent of total aquatic animal production when excluding aquaculture.[69]Employment, Livelihoods, and Food Security
Trawling supports substantial employment in industrial and semi-industrial fisheries, particularly in regions with extensive continental shelves suitable for net deployment. In the European Union, the primary fisheries sector—including prominent bottom and midwater trawling operations—employed an estimated 157,000 individuals in 2022, representing direct jobs on vessels and in related onshore activities.[71] In Norway, trawling within the broader fishing fleet contributed to 17,000 jobs and NOK 22.2 billion in economic value creation in 2023, sustaining rural coastal economies through high-value catches like cod and haddock.[72] Globally, while precise trawling-specific figures are challenging to isolate due to integrated fleet data, capture fisheries employing trawlers account for a significant share of the estimated 36 million jobs in primary production as of late 1990s data, with ongoing contributions in Asia and Africa where vessel crews often number in the hundreds of thousands.[73] In developing countries, trawling underpins livelihoods for coastal populations dependent on marine resources. In Southeast Asia, trawl fisheries form a core component of the sector, providing income and sustenance for millions amid limited diversification options, with vessels typically crewed by 5–20 fishers per operation handling gear and processing onboard.[74] These activities generate revenue through exports and local markets, though foreign-flagged trawlers in West Africa have yielded US$25–38 million annually in some nations like Guinea, benefits often accruing to governments rather than local fishers.[75] Empirical assessments highlight trawling's role in poverty alleviation via seasonal earnings exceeding land-based alternatives in artisanal-integrated systems, despite periodic bans disrupting cash flows.[76] Trawling enhances food security by harvesting demersal and pelagic species that supply affordable, nutrient-dense protein to vulnerable populations. Marine capture fisheries, dominated by trawling in many shelf ecosystems, provided essential seafood contributing to dietary needs in low-income regions, where fish accounts for up to 50% of animal protein intake in some coastal states.[77] Landings from trawled stocks, including shrimp and groundfish, support national supplies and exports that stabilize prices and availability, with studies affirming pathways from harvest to consumption bolstering nutrition beyond direct intake.[78] However, stock depletion risks from overcapacity underscore the need for managed yields to preserve these benefits, as evidenced by recovery data in regulated demersal fisheries.[9]Environmental Impacts
Habitat Alteration and Benthic Effects
Bottom trawling alters benthic habitats primarily through mechanical disturbance, as trawl doors and nets contact the seabed, penetrating sediments to depths of 2.4 cm for otter trawls and up to 16.1 cm for hydraulic dredges, thereby disrupting surface structures such as burrows, tubes, and epifaunal attachments.[79] This process homogenizes the seabed, resuspends fine sediments, and reduces biogenic complexity, favoring opportunistic, short-lived species over slow-growing, habitat-forming ones.[79] In sandy or muddy substrates, natural hydrodynamic forces can mimic some aspects of this disturbance, potentially limiting long-term structural changes, whereas in gravelly or biogenic habitats, losses of erect epifauna like sponges or corals persist longer due to slower recolonization.[79] Empirical meta-analyses indicate that a single trawl pass depletes benthic faunal biomass by 6–41%, with otter trawls causing the least removal (6%) and hydraulic dredges the most (41%), correlating strongly with gear penetration depth.[79] Community-level effects include reduced diversity and shifts toward smaller, more mobile taxa, with trawling intensity explaining up to 15.5% biomass decline at annual frequencies in global datasets.[79] Globally, across 24 regions, 66% of sedimentary seabed habitats remain untrawled, while only 1.5% show depletion (status = 0), and 93% maintain high biotic status (>0.8 relative to pre-trawling conditions), though European shelf areas like the Adriatic Sea exhibit lower status (<0.7) due to higher effort.[80] Recovery of benthic communities post-disturbance varies by habitat resilience and fishing pressure; median times to 50–95% biomass restoration range from 1.9 to 6.4 years, influenced by factors like gravel content and primary productivity.[79] In a Hong Kong trawl ban implemented in 2012, macrobenthic species richness increased from 27.5 to 48.3 per site by 2015, functional diversity rose, and trawled-site biomass doubled, demonstrating abiotic improvements (e.g., reduced fragmentation) linked to biotic recovery.[81] However, chronic high-intensity trawling in deep-sea or seamount environments can lead to persistent degradation, with effects on long-lived biota (lifespan >10 years) 2–3 times greater than on short-lived ones, underscoring habitat-specific vulnerabilities.[82]Bycatch Dynamics
Bycatch in trawling refers to the incidental capture of non-target marine organisms, including fish, invertebrates, marine mammals, seabirds, and sea turtles, due to the non-selective nature of trawl nets that sweep large volumes of water or seabed.[83] Bottom trawls, which contact the seafloor, exacerbate bycatch by disturbing benthic habitats and capturing demersal species, while midwater trawls primarily affect pelagic organisms.[19] Empirical studies indicate that trawling contributes significantly to global bycatch, with bottom trawls accounting for approximately 46% of all marine discards, a subset of bycatch returned to the sea.[9] Global estimates of discards from marine capture fisheries, largely driven by trawling, averaged 9.1 million tonnes annually between 2010 and 2014, representing about 10% of total catches, though rates vary widely by fishery.[84] In shrimp trawling, bycatch ratios can reach 5.25:1 (non-shrimp to shrimp), comprising 67% finfish and 17% other invertebrates, highlighting the inefficiency and ecological pressure from targeting low-value, high-volume species.[85] Seabird bycatch in trawl fisheries results in at least 44,000 deaths yearly worldwide, often from entanglement in warps or nets during hauling.[86] Factors influencing bycatch dynamics include gear design (e.g., mesh size and net opening), fishing location, depth, season, and target species, which determine species composition and abundance in the trawl path.[87] Fish vulnerability correlates with anaerobic swimming performance and metabolic traits, making slower or less evasive species more susceptible to capture.[88] In multispecies fisheries, bycatch patterns exhibit spatiotemporal variability, with machine learning analyses of observer data revealing dependencies on area, month, and vessel behavior in northeastern U.S. trawl fisheries.[89]| Fishery Type | Example Bycatch Ratio | Primary Components | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shrimp Trawl | 5.25:1 (bycatch:shrimp) | 67% finfish, 17% invertebrates | [85] |
| Bottom Trawl (General) | Up to 46% of global discards | Demersal fish, juveniles | [9] |