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Management for sustainable cephalopod fisheries in Europe: review and recommendations

AutorPierce, Graham J. CSIC ORCID; Abad, Esther; Ainsworth, Gillian B.; Allcock, Louise; Bobowski, Bianca; González, Ángel F. CSIC ORCID; Gras, Michaël; Hendrickson, Lisa; Iriondo, Ane; Laptikhovsky, Vladimir; Larivain, A.; Longo, Katie; Macho, Gonzalo; Matos, Fábio L.; Monteiro, Silvia; Montero-Castaño, Carlos; Moreno, Ana (IPMA); Moustahfid, Hassan; Oesterwind, Daniel; Pita, Cristina; Roa, Rubén; Robin, Jean-Paul; Roumbedakis, Katina; Seixas, Sonia; Sobrino, Ignacio; Valeiras, J.; Villasante, Sebastián; Power, Anne Marie
Fecha de publicación2022
CitaciónCephalopod International Advisory Council Conference book of abstracts: 79 (2022)
ResumenAlthough cephalopod fisheries are of world-wide importance, in Europe catching cephalopods is managed only in small-scale fisheries, at national level, and few stocks are formally assessed. Because cephalopod are not quota species under the EU’s Common Fisheries Policy, there is currently no requirement for assessment or management at European level. Given increasing interest in targeting cephalopods in Europe, there is a risk that they will be fished unsustainably. Although there have been recent review papers on progress in stock assessment and fishery forecasting for commercially fished cephalopods there has been no recent review of cephalopod fishery management. We aim to fill this gap, with a particular focus on European cephalopod fisheries.We review potential barriers to sustainable fishing and reasons why management of cephalopod fisheries differs from that for finfish fisheries, e.g. due to the high inherent volatility and the possibly cyclic nature of year-to-year variation in cephalopod abundance, reflecting their short lifespan, rapid growth and high sensitivity to environmental conditions. We review fishery management approaches in important cephalopod fisheries worldwide (e.g. in the USA, Japan, Falklands, South Africa, Australia and Russia) and current management of small-scale cephalopod fisheries in Europe. We identify knowledge gaps and limitations to current monitoring programmes and stock assessments and discuss the options available for cephalopod fishery management in Europe, considering the suitability or otherwise of catch and effort limits, use of closed areas and seasons, restrictions on sizes caught and types of fishing gear, and the ole of market-based sustainability pathways
DescripciónCephalopod International Advisory Council Conference, Cephalopods in the Anthropocene: Multiple Challenges in a Changing Ocean, April 2-8, 2022, Sesimbra, Portugal
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/306947
Aparece en las colecciones: (IIM) Comunicaciones congresos




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