Stories in South Carolina

Fishing: Under Pressure

When just throwing back rare fish isn't enough, we're finding innovative solutions to save discarded fish from decompression sickness.

“We’ve got barotrauma!”

The cry cuts through the rumble of the engine and slapping of waves that earlier were the only sounds aboard Captain Warren Hupman’s Fishing Luhr. With the efficiency of an assembly-line worker, Hupman snaps a metal clip onto the lip of the red snapper that was just pulled aboard.

The fish doesn’t look good. Its eyes bulge wildly, and a large pink balloon protrudes from its open mouth.

Hupman slides out the baited hook, then attaches the clip and the fish to a rod. In less than a minute, the snapper is back in the water, descending rapidly on its own personal zip line. The clip reaches the ocean floor, and the fish swims free.

What is Barotrauma? When Fish Get the Bends

Barotrauma isn’t a new problem for deep-water fish. The word literally means pressure injury, and it’s a condition caused by the sudden change from a high-pressure, deep-water environment to a low-pressure, surface-water environment.

 

Quote: Bob Crimian

So long as fishermen have been reeling up red snapper, gag grouper, black sea bass and other deep-water fish, some of those fish have suffered from decompression sickness.

TNC Southeast Ocean Conservation Specialist

“So long as fishermen have been reeling up red snapper, gag grouper, black sea bass and other deep-water fish, some of those fish have suffered from decompression sickness,” says Bob Crimian, southeast ocean conservation specialist for The Nature Conservancy. “It’s like a diver getting the bends.’”

When a fish moves from high to low pressure too quickly, the compressed gas in its body expands, causing the stomach to stretch out of the mouth, eyes to bulge and bubbles to form in the heart and brain.

“Fish returned quickly to deep water shrink back to normal size and swim away,” says Crimian. “If they’re just thrown back, though, they float. These floaters often die from barotrauma or predators.”

Why Throwing Fish Back Is Not Enough

Unfortunately, red snapper caught locally must be thrown back most of the year. Red snapper season in the South Atlantic is extremely limited: In recent years, it’s been only a few days long. Before that, it sometimes didn’t open at all. A major contributor to this short season is discard mortality, or fish caught by accident that die after being returned to the ocean.

Fish thrown back without use of the device often become floaters, like this red snapper, unable to return to depth on their own and easy prey for predators.
Floater Fish thrown back without use of the device often become floaters, like this red snapper, unable to return to depth on their own and easy prey for predators. © Cameron Rhodes

“It’s so frustrating for fishermen,” says Crimian. “They can’t keep what they catch, but throwing the fish back doesn’t help. Some years, the entire catch quota is used up by discarded fish that are assumed to have died after being released.”

Barotrauma is worst in summer, when the temperature difference is greatest between surface water and deep water.

“The fish that get barotrauma are the ones everyone wants to catch—the big ones,” says Hupman. “Summer is our peak fishing season, and it’s when those big fish suffer the most.”

Saving More Fish

Since fishermen can’t avoid accidental bycatch, TNC and other partners—including Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary, Georgia Sea Grant, the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council and Georgia Department of Natural Resources—turned their attention to saving discarded fish.

Historically, fishermen used to treat barotrauma by venting, or deflating a swollen fish’s swim bladder with a large, hollow needle. It wasn’t an ideal solution.

“I’m no doctor,” says Hupman. “I didn’t like it, and my customers didn’t like it. The fish would leave a trail of blood. You didn’t feel like you were doing a good thing.”

Venting also is unreliable. When holding a thrashing fish, it’s all too easy to puncture a vital organ by mistake.

Saving Fish from Barotrauma

Fish descending devices can make a big difference in helping deep-sea fish recover from the trauma of depressurization. Click through the photos to learn how the process works.

black see bass on hook
black sea bass with barotrauma
fish descending device being attached to fish
fish being lowered into ocean using descending device
fish entering water on descending device

Encouraging the Use of Descending Devices to Save Fish

When fish descending devices entered the market in the early 2010s, it was a big step forward. A fisherman latches the device onto a fish, then drops it via a fishing line. The device travels down to deep water, carrying the fish with it. Depending on the device, it either releases automatically at the appropriate water pressure or is released manually by the fisherman. Still, two big problems remained:

  • Fishermen had to get devices and learn how to use them.
  • Scientists needed data on the devices’ impact before they could influence fisheries management.

 

Quote: Warren Hupman

I want there to be more fish so I can always come out here and fish. If I have grandkids someday, I want them to be able to come out here and fish.

Fishing Luhr Charter Captain

Thanks to a grant from the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation, TNC is on track to distribute 200 descending devices to charter captains and recreational fishermen in Georgia, such as Hupman, by the end of 2020. The initiative is part of TNC’s South Atlantic seascape program, which covers the waters off South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia and Florida. TNC plans to expand the descending devices pilot across the region. The next step will be an orientation trip to South Carolina to teach fishermen there how to use the devices.

In exchange for receiving a free device, fishermen agree to attend a learning exchange that shares best fishing practices, then to report back on how they use the device. How many fish with barotrauma did they catch? Which species? Their answers will give scientists critical data on whether descending devices can help restore fish populations.

Collecting the data is an extra step, but it’s one that captains like Hupman are happy to take if it means fewer fish die.

“People have been really interested in and positive about the devices,” he says of his clients and fellow charter captains. “I tell them, ‘We’re going to use this to put the fish back so we can catch it again during season.’ They say, ‘That’s pretty cool.’”

Partnerships to Protect Fish

TNC and other partners are working with fishermen like Captain Warren Hupman to save deep-sea fish from barotrauma and to educate other fishermen and the public about best fishing practices. Click on the photos to learn more.

sunrise seen from fishing boat
red snapper in hand
Red snapper with barotrauma
fish descending device
Fisherman Warren Hupman with red snapper

Allowing Fishermen to Be Better Stewards

“Fishing is like Christmas morning,” says Hupman. “Until that fish breaks the water, you never know what could be at the end of that line.”

For many recreational fishermen, going out on the water is more about the experience than it is bringing home dinner. Making sure there are plenty of fish to catch—and re-catch—is just common sense.

“Fishing is what I love to do,” says Hupman. “I want there to be more fish so I can always come out here and fish. If I have grandkids someday, I want them to be able to come out here and fish.”

Support TNC’s South Atlantic seascape fisheries work by contacting Elizabeth Foster at 843-800-1274 or efoster@tnc.org.