Small-scale fisheries (SSF) play a crucial role in the Mediterranean Sea, contributing significantly to coastal livelihoods, employment, food security, and local economies. These fisheries are highly diverse and often operate with multiple passive gears within a single trip, targeting different species based on season, market demand, and fisher preference. This gear diversity, combined with the absence of trip-level gear reporting, poses a challenge for accurate monitoring, gear-specific effort estimation, and sustainable management. This study presents a Machine Learning-based approach to predict the type of fishing gear used during individual hauling events from high frequency vessel tracking data. Tracking data were collected from 10 SSF multi-gear vessels based in Ancona (Italy) between January 2023 and March 2024, and over 7000 hauling events were detected from a total of 1634 trips. Each event was labelled through fisher validation and expert-informed spatial analysis. Predictive models – Ridge Classifier, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Random Forest, and Extreme Gradient Boosting – were trained and tested using various sets of predictors. Two classification levels were explored: i) gear categories (nets vs. pots) and ii) specific gear types (i.e., gillnets, trammel nets, and three types of pots). With fewer predictors and optimized tuning, Random Forest reached 95% test accuracy for gear category and Extreme Gradient Boosting achieved 86% for specific gear type classification, successfully maintaining low levels of overfitting. The shared, reproducible hauling event-level approach offers a scalable tool for automated gear classification in multi-gear fisheries and contributes to more precise monitoring, management, and traceability in small-scale coastal systems.

Machine learning-based prediction of passive gears from vessel tracking data in small-scale multi-gear fisheries

Lattanzi, Pamela
Primo
Conceptualization
;
Tassetti, Anna Nora
Ultimo
Supervision
2026

Abstract

Small-scale fisheries (SSF) play a crucial role in the Mediterranean Sea, contributing significantly to coastal livelihoods, employment, food security, and local economies. These fisheries are highly diverse and often operate with multiple passive gears within a single trip, targeting different species based on season, market demand, and fisher preference. This gear diversity, combined with the absence of trip-level gear reporting, poses a challenge for accurate monitoring, gear-specific effort estimation, and sustainable management. This study presents a Machine Learning-based approach to predict the type of fishing gear used during individual hauling events from high frequency vessel tracking data. Tracking data were collected from 10 SSF multi-gear vessels based in Ancona (Italy) between January 2023 and March 2024, and over 7000 hauling events were detected from a total of 1634 trips. Each event was labelled through fisher validation and expert-informed spatial analysis. Predictive models – Ridge Classifier, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Random Forest, and Extreme Gradient Boosting – were trained and tested using various sets of predictors. Two classification levels were explored: i) gear categories (nets vs. pots) and ii) specific gear types (i.e., gillnets, trammel nets, and three types of pots). With fewer predictors and optimized tuning, Random Forest reached 95% test accuracy for gear category and Extreme Gradient Boosting achieved 86% for specific gear type classification, successfully maintaining low levels of overfitting. The shared, reproducible hauling event-level approach offers a scalable tool for automated gear classification in multi-gear fisheries and contributes to more precise monitoring, management, and traceability in small-scale coastal systems.
2026
Istituto per le Risorse Biologiche e le Biotecnologie Marine - IRBIM - Sede Secondaria Ancona
AI
Behavior
Fishing gear
GPS
Machine learning
Supervised classification
Vessel tracking
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/575621
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