Kerby, Tina (2013) UK fisheries, climate change and North Sea fishes: a long-term perspective. Doctoral thesis, University of East Anglia.
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Abstract
Abstract
North Sea demersal fishes and fisheries have changed over the past 100 years. To detect the main factors driving these changes, long-term data are needed. Using historical fisheries data that extend throughout the 20th century, this thesis aims to assess drivers influencing developments in fisheries as well as changes in the distribution and abundance of commercially important fishes in the North Sea.
For English demersal fisheries, favourable political, technological and economical drivers were identified, inducing a vast rise in English fisheries in the first half of the 20th century; however, the same drivers, acting adversely, influenced the decline in recent decades and the emphasis of fisheries shifted from England to Scotland.
Different trends in distribution were observed for North Sea whiting, turbot and brill between the 1920s and 2000s. Whiting distribution shifted westward between the late 1940s and1960s, whereas turbot nearly disappeared from the northern North Sea from the 1970s onwards. Brill distribution remained rather stable in the central and southern North Sea. The reasons for the longitudinal shift of whiting remained unclear as the relationships to two potential drivers, climate change and fishing pressure, were not strong. For turbot, the cause for the near disappearance from the northern North Sea is inconclusive.
Commercial fisheries data were assessed reliable for distribution analysis when comparing commercial data of whiting, a commonly discarded species, and unbiased survey data. Whiting, compared to flatfish, is of secondary commercial importance. In areas where discrepancies occurred between commercial and survey data, higher discarding of whiting is suggested, as highly priced flatfish are caught there.
This thesis demonstrates past conditions of demersal fish populations and fisheries in the North Sea and presents the effects of different drivers on them. The documented changes in fishes and fisheries contain valuable information for resetting baselines and developing appropriate management strategies.
*[N.B.: Additional data was attached to this thesis at the time of its submission. Please refer to the author for further details.]
Item Type: | Thesis (Doctoral) |
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Faculty \ School: | Faculty of Science > School of Environmental Sciences |
Depositing User: | Users 2259 not found. |
Date Deposited: | 06 Mar 2014 15:17 |
Last Modified: | 06 Mar 2014 15:17 |
URI: | https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/47987 |
DOI: |
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