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The effects of spatial targeting of fishing effort on the distribution of the Norway lobster,Nephrops norvegicus,on the Farn Deeps grounds,northeast England
Authors:Michael C Bell  Jon M Elson  Julian T Addison
Institution:1. The Centre for Environment, Fisheries &2. Aquaculture Science , Pakefield Road, Lowestoft, Suffolk, NR32 5DH, United Kingdom;3. Goose Cottage, 4 Mobbs Cottages, Hall Lane, Oulton, Lowestoft, Suffolk, NR33 0HT, United Kingdom;4. Aquaculture Science , Pakefield Road, Lowestoft, Suffolk, NR32 5DH, United Kingdom;5. Aquaculture Science , Pakefield Road, Lowestoft, Suffolk, NR32 5DH, United Kingdom E-mail: j.t.addison@cefas.co.uk
Abstract:Nephrops norvegicus is an essentially sedentary species of lobster that forms the basis of valuable fisheries in the northwest Atlantic and western Mediterranean. Fishers exploiting a sedentary stock are likely to visit the most profitable (highest catch rate) areas first. Such spatial targeting of fishing effort is likely to have important consequences for stock monitoring and assessment. We used underwater television surveys of Nephrops burrow densities on the Farn Deeps grounds, northeast England, to describe changes in abundance and distribution between the beginning and end of a winter fishing season. Above a threshold of c. 0.6 burrows m–2, overwinter depletion increased with burrow density, consistent with fishing effort being targeted at the highest densities. A simple simulation model showed that this pattern of mortality is an expected consequence of spatially targeted fishing behaviour. The model also predicted that there is decreased spatial variability in density after fishing. An overall decrease in variability was not evident from the survey data, but geostatistical analysis indicated that there was “flattening” of the density profile along a north‐south axis, consistent with the dominant direction of commercial trawling. We concluded that Nephrops fishers are able to find and exploit the highest densities of their target species. A potential consequence is that catch per unit effort (CPUE) data used to monitor trends in this stock potentially could mask declines in stock abundance. CPUE might be more effective if analysed at finer spatial scales, but this is not currently possible. In the absence of these fine scale commercial data, fishery‐independent surveys (e.g., underwater television) are an important source of information on trends in stock abundance.
Keywords:Nephrops norvegicus  Norway lobster  spatial patterns  fishing  underwater television
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