Alessandro Lucchetti
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Alessandro Lucchetti.
Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science | 2016
Emilio Notti; Jure Brčić; Francesco De Carlo; Bent Herrmann; Alessandro Lucchetti; Massimo Virgili; Antonello Sala
Abstract The catch performance of a traditional Ligurian boat seine, which is not in line with the European Union regulation, was compared with an experimental surrounding net without the purse line as a potential legal alternative. The relative catch performance between the two gear types was assessed using a new catch comparison method requiring neither paired data collection nor equal number of hauls with the two gears. The comparison was based on the catches of the three species that comprise the bulk of the catch in traditional Ligurian boat seine fisheries: Bogue Boops boops, Saddle Bream Oblada melanura, and Blotched Picarel Spicara maena. The experimental gear exhibited poor catch efficiency for all three species, since it was estimated that the catches would only be 2, 64, and 6%, respectively, of those with the boat seine. For both Bogue and Blotched Picarel these reductions in catch performance were found to be highly significant proving that the experimental surrounding net is not a viable solution to replace the traditional boat seine.
PeerJ | 2017
Alessandro Lucchetti; Claudio Vasapollo; Massimo Virgili
The loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta, Linnaeus, 1758) is the most abundant sea turtle species in the Mediterranean Sea, where commercial fishing appears to be the main driver of mortality. So far, information on sea turtle bycatch in Italy is limited both in space and time due to logistical problems in data collected through onboard observations and on a limited number of vessels involved. In the present study, sea turtle bycatch in Italian waters was examined by collecting fishermen’s information on turtle bycatch through an interview-based approach. Their replies enabled the identification of bycatch hotspots in relation to area, season and to the main gear types. The most harmful fishing gears resulted to be trawl nets, showing the highest probabilities of turtle bycatch with a hotspot in the Adriatic Sea, followed by longlines in the Ionian Sea and in the Sicily Channel. Estimates obtained by the present results showed that more than 52,000 capture events and 10,000 deaths occurred in Italian waters in 2014, highlighting a more alarming scenario than earlier studies. The work shows that in case of poor data from other sources, direct questioning of fishermen and stakeholders could represent a useful and cost-effective approach capable of providing sufficient data to estimate annual bycatch rates and identify high-risk gear/location/season combinations.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Antonello Sala; Bent Herrmann; Francesco De Carlo; Alessandro Lucchetti; Jure Brčić
It is well established that increasing mesh number in the circumference of a diamond-mesh trawl codend can reduce size selection for round fish, whereas selection for flat fish species is unaffected. This effect has also been documented in Mediterranean trawl fisheries. In contrast, no information is available with regard to the effect of increasing mesh number in the circumference of square-mesh codends on the size selection of round fish and flat fish species. A field study was devised to bridge this gap and formulate proposals aimed at improving trawl fishery management. Size selection data were collected for a round fish species, red mullet (Mullus barbatus), and two flat fish species, Mediterranean scaldfish (Arnoglossus laterna) and solenette (Buglossidium luteum). Fishing trials were conducted in the Adriatic Sea (Central Mediterranean) using three square-mesh codends that differed only in mesh number around the circumference. Results demonstrated that increasing the number of meshes from 107 to 213 reduced the 50% retention length (L50) for red mullet by 2.5 cm but did not affect size selection for the two flat fish species. In some fisheries, regulatory provisions regarding the number of meshes in the circumference should therefore be carefully considered both for diamond- and square-mesh codends.
Fisheries Research | 2007
Antonello Sala; Alessandro Lucchetti; Gabriele Buglioni
Fisheries Research | 2010
Antonello Sala; Alessandro Lucchetti
Fisheries Research | 2008
Joana Prat; J. Antonijuan; A. Folch; Antonello Sala; Alessandro Lucchetti; Francisco Sardà; Antoni Mànuel
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2012
Alessandro Lucchetti; Antonello Sala
Fisheries Research | 2009
Antonello Sala; Joana d’Arc Prat Farran; Josefina Antonijuan; Alessandro Lucchetti
Fisheries Research | 2015
Antonello Sala; Alessandro Lucchetti; Anna Perdichizzi; Bent Herrmann; Paola Rinelli
Aquatic Living Resources | 2011
Antonello Sala; Alessandro Lucchetti; Marco Affronte