Sustainable management of Kattegat cod; better knowledge of stock components and migration

This report describes the main findings from the EMFF project “Bæredygtig forvaltning af Kattegat-torsk; bedre viden om bestandskomponenter og migration” (J. nr. 33113-B-16-034) which was initiated to improve our understanding of stock mixing and migration in Atlantic cod in the Kattegat in order to...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hemmer-Hansen, Jakob, Hüssy, Karin, Vinther, Morten, Albertsen, Christoffer Moesgaard, Storr-Paulsen, Marie, Eero, Margit
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: DTU Aqua 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbit.dtu.dk/en/publications/c180d450-e678-44ec-8b29-7635a71a1a6f
https://backend.orbit.dtu.dk/ws/files/215628161/357_2020_Sustainable_management_of_Kattegat_cod.pdf
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Summary:This report describes the main findings from the EMFF project “Bæredygtig forvaltning af Kattegat-torsk; bedre viden om bestandskomponenter og migration” (J. nr. 33113-B-16-034) which was initiated to improve our understanding of stock mixing and migration in Atlantic cod in the Kattegat in order to improve the data for stock assessment and management. The stock assessment of the Kattegat cod has recently been challenged due to a large “unallocated mortality”, i.e. a large fraction of fish that disappears from the area, but cannot be explained by mortality due to fishing or natural causes. It has been hypothesized that migration between the Kattegat and the North Sea could explain some of the unallocated mortality. The major scientific questions we aimed at answering in the project were: 1. Do cod from the North Sea and Kattegat mix within the Kattegat stock assessment and management area? If they do, then 2. During which time of their life do North Sea cod enter the Kattegat? 3. Are there any spatial patterns of mixing and are there indications of different magnitudes of mixing for different age classes? 4. Do cod migrate between the Kattegat and North Sea? The project had three main components: Genetic analyses to identify population of origin of fish, chemical analyses to identify individual fish migration histories and finally integration of results with stock assessment and the development of future procedures for data collection and stock assessment in Kattegat cod. We used a unique combination of methodology that allowed us to both identify the population of origin, and hence mixing of populations, with high spatial and temporal resolution, and the migration trajectories of individual fish. Genetic data revealed that North Sea and local Kattegat/transition zone cod indeed co-occur (mix) within the Kattegat, and that there is a gradient in mixing proportion from high proportion of North Sea cod in the northern parts of the Kattegat to lower proportions in the south. We also found variation between ages and ...