long line fishing

listen to the pronunciation of long line fishing
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الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Long-line fishing is a commercial fishing technique that uses hundreds or even thousands of baited hooks hanging from a single line. Swordfish, tuna, halibut, sablefish and Patagonian toothfish are commonly caught by this method. In some unstable fisheries such as that of Patagonian toothfish in New Zealand, fishermen may be limited to as few as 25 hooks on a line. In contrast, large commercial long-liners in certain robust fisheries of the Bering Sea and North Pacific generally run over 2500 hand-baited hooks on a single series of connected lines many miles in length. Long-lines can be set to hang near the surface (pelagic longline) to catch fish such as tuna and swordfish or along the sea floor (Demersal longline) for groundfish such as halibut or cod. Pelagic longlines are the most common commercial fishing gear in the world
long line fishing

    الواصلة

    Long line fish·ing

    التركية النطق

    lông layn fîşîng

    النطق

    /ˈlôɴɢ ˈlīn ˈfəsʜəɴɢ/ /ˈlɔːŋ ˈlaɪn ˈfɪʃɪŋ/
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