Understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment

The need to understand the impact of the environment on the fluctuations in fisheries yield in the Northeast Atlantic was a major motivation for the creation of ICES. From the very beginning, two main research tasks were talen on: l) the establishment of relationships between the distribution and be...

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Main Author: Nakken, Odd
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: ICES 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/107489
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spelling ftimr:oai:imr.brage.unit.no:11250/107489 2023-05-15T17:41:41+02:00 Understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment Nakken, Odd 2002 763243 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/107489 eng eng ICES ICES Marine Science Symposia 215 urn:issn:1054-3139 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/107489 247-255 Conference object 2002 ftimr 2021-09-23T20:15:03Z The need to understand the impact of the environment on the fluctuations in fisheries yield in the Northeast Atlantic was a major motivation for the creation of ICES. From the very beginning, two main research tasks were talen on: l) the establishment of relationships between the distribution and behaviour of fish and environmental characteristics for the purpose of real-time and short-term predictions and advice about where and when the fishing fleets could increase their catches, and 2) the influence of environmental factors on fish stock parameters/variables such as recruitment, growth, maturation, and mortality in order to advise on optimum yields and forecast yield fluctuations. While the purpose of the first of these tasks was rendered unnecessary some decades ago by developments in fish finding and communication systems in the commercial fleets, the second task remains a major topic for study. Until a few decades ago, knowledge of the relationship between fish and environmental conditions was largely qualitative and based almost exclusively on field studies which provided information on "associated phenomena", in some instances quantified by correlations where the underlying mechanisms were hypothesized. During the 1960s and 1970s, efforts to describe "cause and effect" and to quantify the relationships increased considerably. These efforts included studies of species and stock interactions, ecosystem modelling, and field and laboratory experiments with instrumentation enabling observations of fish and their offspring as well as environmental variables over wide ranges of size, space, and time scales. The results of such process-related investigations, coupled with observations from long time series of environmental data and life history tables for fish stocks form the basis for our present understanding of how environmental conditions influence stocks and yields. For some stocks, such knowledge has been included in the regular stock assessments carried out by ICES in recent years. Conference Object Northeast Atlantic Institute for Marine Research: Brage IMR
institution Open Polar
collection Institute for Marine Research: Brage IMR
op_collection_id ftimr
language English
description The need to understand the impact of the environment on the fluctuations in fisheries yield in the Northeast Atlantic was a major motivation for the creation of ICES. From the very beginning, two main research tasks were talen on: l) the establishment of relationships between the distribution and behaviour of fish and environmental characteristics for the purpose of real-time and short-term predictions and advice about where and when the fishing fleets could increase their catches, and 2) the influence of environmental factors on fish stock parameters/variables such as recruitment, growth, maturation, and mortality in order to advise on optimum yields and forecast yield fluctuations. While the purpose of the first of these tasks was rendered unnecessary some decades ago by developments in fish finding and communication systems in the commercial fleets, the second task remains a major topic for study. Until a few decades ago, knowledge of the relationship between fish and environmental conditions was largely qualitative and based almost exclusively on field studies which provided information on "associated phenomena", in some instances quantified by correlations where the underlying mechanisms were hypothesized. During the 1960s and 1970s, efforts to describe "cause and effect" and to quantify the relationships increased considerably. These efforts included studies of species and stock interactions, ecosystem modelling, and field and laboratory experiments with instrumentation enabling observations of fish and their offspring as well as environmental variables over wide ranges of size, space, and time scales. The results of such process-related investigations, coupled with observations from long time series of environmental data and life history tables for fish stocks form the basis for our present understanding of how environmental conditions influence stocks and yields. For some stocks, such knowledge has been included in the regular stock assessments carried out by ICES in recent years.
format Conference Object
author Nakken, Odd
spellingShingle Nakken, Odd
Understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment
author_facet Nakken, Odd
author_sort Nakken, Odd
title Understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment
title_short Understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment
title_full Understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment
title_fullStr Understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment
title_full_unstemmed Understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment
title_sort understanding environmental control on fish stocks and progress toward their inclusion in fish stock assessment
publisher ICES
publishDate 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/107489
genre Northeast Atlantic
genre_facet Northeast Atlantic
op_source 247-255
op_relation ICES Marine Science Symposia
215
urn:issn:1054-3139
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/107489
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