Fishery Description: Hake Southern and Northern stocks. FishPi proyect (MARE/2014/19)

European hake (Merluccius merluccius) is widely distributed over the Northeast Atlantic shelf, from Norway to Mauritania, with a larger density from the British Islands to the south of Spain and in the Mediterranean and Black sea (ICES, 2015a). Hake is commercially exploited since the eighteenth cen...

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Main Authors: Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, J. (José), Castro, J. (José), Zarauz, L. (Lucía), Azevedo, M. (Manuela), Dubroca, L. (Laurent)
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Centro Oceanográfico de Santander 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10508/10434
id ftieo:oai:repositorio.ieo.es:10508/10434
record_format openpolar
spelling ftieo:oai:repositorio.ieo.es:10508/10434 2023-05-15T17:34:35+02:00 Fishery Description: Hake Southern and Northern stocks. FishPi proyect (MARE/2014/19) Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, J. (José) Castro, J. (José) Zarauz, L. (Lucía) Azevedo, M. (Manuela) Dubroca, L. (Laurent) Atlantic Ocean North Atlantic Northeast Atlantic 2016-06-07 http://hdl.handle.net/10508/10434 eng eng Centro Oceanográfico de Santander FishPi project (MARE/2014/19) http://hdl.handle.net/10508/10434 openAccess fishery description hake regional project 2016 ftieo 2022-08-30T23:47:24Z European hake (Merluccius merluccius) is widely distributed over the Northeast Atlantic shelf, from Norway to Mauritania, with a larger density from the British Islands to the south of Spain and in the Mediterranean and Black sea (ICES, 2015a). Hake is commercially exploited since the eighteenth century (Casey and Pereiro, 1995) but, unlike other gadoids as cod and haddock that supported important fisheries for centuries, large‐scale hake fishery began during the first half of the twentieth century. The European hake is a demersal and benthopelagic species, found mainly between 70 and 370 m depth; however, it also occurs in inshore waters (30 m) and down to depths of 1000 m (Cohen et al., 1990). Juvenile and small Europe hake usually live on muddy beds on the continental shelf, whereas large adult individuals are found on the shelf slope, where the bottom is rough and associated with canyons and cliffs. These biological characteristics make hake catches appears in most of metiers. Fleets involved use a variety of gears including otter trawlers, pair‐trawlers, gillnetters, longliners and, mainly in the southern case, a very heterogeneous small scale fleet –where also gears as traps, hand lines and small trammel nets are present—. Hake is caught in mixed fisheries together with megrim, monkfish, Nephrops, blue whiting, horse mackerel and mackerel depending in all cases on the area and the gear used. Other/Unknown Material North Atlantic Northeast Atlantic Instituto Español de Oceanografía: e-IEO Hake ENVELOPE(15.612,15.612,66.797,66.797) Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Instituto Español de Oceanografía: e-IEO
op_collection_id ftieo
language English
topic fishery description
hake
regional
spellingShingle fishery description
hake
regional
Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, J. (José)
Castro, J. (José)
Zarauz, L. (Lucía)
Azevedo, M. (Manuela)
Dubroca, L. (Laurent)
Fishery Description: Hake Southern and Northern stocks. FishPi proyect (MARE/2014/19)
topic_facet fishery description
hake
regional
description European hake (Merluccius merluccius) is widely distributed over the Northeast Atlantic shelf, from Norway to Mauritania, with a larger density from the British Islands to the south of Spain and in the Mediterranean and Black sea (ICES, 2015a). Hake is commercially exploited since the eighteenth century (Casey and Pereiro, 1995) but, unlike other gadoids as cod and haddock that supported important fisheries for centuries, large‐scale hake fishery began during the first half of the twentieth century. The European hake is a demersal and benthopelagic species, found mainly between 70 and 370 m depth; however, it also occurs in inshore waters (30 m) and down to depths of 1000 m (Cohen et al., 1990). Juvenile and small Europe hake usually live on muddy beds on the continental shelf, whereas large adult individuals are found on the shelf slope, where the bottom is rough and associated with canyons and cliffs. These biological characteristics make hake catches appears in most of metiers. Fleets involved use a variety of gears including otter trawlers, pair‐trawlers, gillnetters, longliners and, mainly in the southern case, a very heterogeneous small scale fleet –where also gears as traps, hand lines and small trammel nets are present—. Hake is caught in mixed fisheries together with megrim, monkfish, Nephrops, blue whiting, horse mackerel and mackerel depending in all cases on the area and the gear used.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, J. (José)
Castro, J. (José)
Zarauz, L. (Lucía)
Azevedo, M. (Manuela)
Dubroca, L. (Laurent)
author_facet Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, J. (José)
Castro, J. (José)
Zarauz, L. (Lucía)
Azevedo, M. (Manuela)
Dubroca, L. (Laurent)
author_sort Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, J. (José)
title Fishery Description: Hake Southern and Northern stocks. FishPi proyect (MARE/2014/19)
title_short Fishery Description: Hake Southern and Northern stocks. FishPi proyect (MARE/2014/19)
title_full Fishery Description: Hake Southern and Northern stocks. FishPi proyect (MARE/2014/19)
title_fullStr Fishery Description: Hake Southern and Northern stocks. FishPi proyect (MARE/2014/19)
title_full_unstemmed Fishery Description: Hake Southern and Northern stocks. FishPi proyect (MARE/2014/19)
title_sort fishery description: hake southern and northern stocks. fishpi proyect (mare/2014/19)
publisher Centro Oceanográfico de Santander
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10508/10434
op_coverage Atlantic Ocean
North Atlantic
Northeast Atlantic
long_lat ENVELOPE(15.612,15.612,66.797,66.797)
geographic Hake
Norway
geographic_facet Hake
Norway
genre North Atlantic
Northeast Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
Northeast Atlantic
op_relation FishPi project (MARE/2014/19)
http://hdl.handle.net/10508/10434
op_rights openAccess
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