Indigenous fishing techniques and their effectiveness as perceived by fishers in Cachar District, Assam, India


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Authors

  • Kapil Deb Nath
  • Simanku Borah
  • Barkha Rani Chetia
  • Nabadeep Saikia
  • Bhaskar J. Saud
  • Ranendra Kumar Majumdar

https://doi.org/10.21077/ijf.2018.65.1.65095-18

Abstract

The present study investigated traditional fishing devices namely Bundh, Dori and Gori Jal operated by fishers of Cachar District, Assam in rivers and small canals. The study was carried out in Ghagra River and adjoining small canals. Water current as well as indigenous knowledge of fishers on movement of fishes and foraging behaviour of freshwater prawns were found to be utilised to a great extent to catch the target species. Assessment of the effectiveness and rationality as perceived by fishers and experts respectively showed that Bundh fishing was highly effective Mean Perceived Effectiveness Index (MPEI score >2.5) whereas the other two fishing techniques namely Dori and Gori Jal were effective (MPEI score >2). All the three indigenous fishing techniques were found to be rational with a mean score ≥3.

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Author Biography

  • Kapil Deb Nath

    Associate Professor and Head

    Department of Fish Processing Technology and Engineering

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Submitted

2016-12-12

Published

2018-03-31

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How to Cite

Nath, K. D., Borah, S., Chetia, B. R., Saikia, N., Saud, B. J., & Majumdar, R. K. (2018). Indigenous fishing techniques and their effectiveness as perceived by fishers in Cachar District, Assam, India. Indian Journal of Fisheries, 65(1). https://doi.org/10.21077/ijf.2018.65.1.65095-18
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