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  2. Catch per unit effort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catch_Per_Unit_Effort

    The best practice is to standardise the effort employed (e.g. number of traps or duration of searching), which controls for the reduction in catch size that often results from subsequent efforts. [2] Although CPUE is a relative measure of abundance, it can be used to estimate absolute abundances. [3]

  3. Creel (basket) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creel_(basket)

    Angler's creel. A creel is a wicker basket usually used for carrying fish or blocks of peat.It is also the fish trap used to catch lobsters and other crustaceans.. In modern times, the term has come to encompass various types of wicker baskets used by anglers or commercial fishermen to hold fish or other prey.

  4. Crab fisheries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crab_fisheries

    Portunus pelagicus (known as flower crabs, blue crabs, blue swimmer crabs, blue manna crabs or sand crabs) is a large crab found in the intertidal estuaries of the Indian and Pacific Oceans (Asian coasts) and the Middle-Eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea. The name flower crab is used in east Asian countries while the latter names are used ...

  5. Beaufort’s cherished blue crab is ‘mean as hell.’ But ...

    www.aol.com/beaufort-cherished-blue-crab-mean...

    Everett checks 200 traps daily, sometimes hauling in as many as 10 bushels of blue crab. A single bushel can hold between two and six dozen crab depending on their size.

  6. More than 8,000 pounds of abandoned crab traps pulled from ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/more-8-000-pounds...

    Specifically, Baldrica and her two crewmates aboard the Nauti Girl returned to land with a tournament-winning 30 stone crab and blue crab traps, each abandoned, maybe for years, in the ...

  7. Callinectes sapidus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callinectes_sapidus

    Blue crab escaping from the net along the Core Banks of North Carolina.. Callinectes sapidus (from the Ancient Greek κάλλος,"beautiful" + nectes, "swimmer", and Latin sapidus, "savory"), the blue crab, Atlantic blue crab, or, regionally, the Maryland blue crab, is a species of crab native to the waters of the western Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, and introduced internationally.