“…The codend is the part of towed fishing gears where the catch is collected and where the main selection of fish occurs (Wileman et al, 1996). Therefore, most studies on towed fishing gears, e.g., selectivity studies on trawls (e.g., Reeves et al, 1992;Graham et al, 2004;Frandsen et al, 2010) or Danish anchor seines (e.g., Herrmann et al, 2016;Noack et al, 2017), or survival studies (e.g., Uhlmann et al, 2016), focused on the individuals in or escaping from the codend. Previous studies on the selectivity of commercially valuable crustaceans in different types of trawls, however, found that a substantial part of the selection of Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus; Hillis and Earley, 1982), brown shrimp (Crangon crangon; Polet, 2000) and Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba; Krag et al, 2014a) takes place in the forward parts of a trawl net.…”