September 10, 2003
RECOVERY OF DOUBLE-TAGGED HALIBUT PAYS DOUBLE
REWARD
During September 2003, the International
Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC) will be releasing halibut in
Area 2B (British Columbia) which have been tagged with external
wire spaghetti tags on the dark side of the head, and internal
PIT (Passively Integrated Transponder) tags. IPHC is asking
harvesters to look for tagged halibut, and, if possible, to
leave the external wire tag on the fish until examined by IPHC
personnel.

The purpose of the double tagging study is to
examine the retention and durability of internal PIT tags on
Pacific halibut in situ. PIT tags are being used by IPHC
in a coastwide project with an objective of providing a direct
estimate of abundance. It will also provide exploitation rates
in areas where no analytic assessment exists. The external wire
tags used in the double-tag study are two-toned orange in color
(see photo), showing the letters "IPHC" and a 5-digit
number. When a halibut with this type of wire tag is turned in
to IPHC personnel, the head will be scanned with special
equipment to check for presence and operation of the internal
PIT tag.
Recovery of the external wire tag while still
attached to the head is very important. To encourage harvesters
to leave the wire tags on the fish, the standard tag reward of
$5 or a Tag Reward Hat is being doubled, i.e., $10 or 2 hats,
when a head is provided with the external tag still in place.
Leave the external tag attached and report the tagged fish to
IPHC samplers. IPHC has samplers in Prince Rupert, Port Hardy,
and Vancouver during the halibut season. If IPHC staff are
unavailable when fish are offloaded, harvesters should contact
the IPHC office at (206) 634-1838 for handling instructions. If
it is not possible to contact IPHC by phone, remove the tag and
forward it with the recovery information (recovery date,
recovery location (latitude/longitude preferred), fish length,
sex, and ear bones if possible) to the IPHC. Include the vessel
and finder's name and address so a reward can be mailed. If the
wire tag is removed and the PIT tag is unavailable for scanning,
only a single hat or $5 can be rewarded.
IPHC asks harvesters to return any tagged
halibut they catch. Tagged halibut of any size may be retained
from any gear, although undersized halibut may not be sold. IPHC
strongly encourages harvesters, observers, and plant personnel
to watch for and retain all tagged halibut, and to return the
tags with as much information as possible.
- END -
Bruce M. Leaman
Executive Director
Phone: (206) 634-1838
Fax: (206) 632-2983
Web: www.iphc.washington.edu