A long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the North Sea

Following decades of declines, populations of large fish recently started to increase in the North Sea, presumably due to reduced fishing pressure. However, population recovery may be too readily claimed, since standardised sampling of fish stocks commenced only in the 1970s, well after many species...

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Main Author: Bom, Roeland
Other Authors: Roeland Bom, NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research in cooperation with Utrecht University
Language:unknown
Published: NIOZ 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.25850/nioz/7b.b.rd
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spelling ftniozdata:doi:10.25850/nioz/7b.b.rd 2023-05-15T15:56:10+02:00 A long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the North Sea Bom, Roeland Roeland Bom NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research in cooperation with Utrecht University 2022-10-24 https://doi.org/10.25850/nioz/7b.b.rd unknown NIOZ https://doi.org/10.25850/nioz/7b.b.rd Earth and Environmental Sciences Dipturus batis Dipturus intermedius Marine historical ecology Shifting baselines Number per swept area 2022 ftniozdata https://doi.org/10.25850/nioz/7b.b.rd 2022-11-02T23:13:10Z Following decades of declines, populations of large fish recently started to increase in the North Sea, presumably due to reduced fishing pressure. However, population recovery may be too readily claimed, since standardised sampling of fish stocks commenced only in the 1970s, well after many species had already collapsed. A true recovery must be seen from a long-term perspective. The critically endangered common skate (Dipturus batis, Rajidae) species-complex is an example of a large-bodied fish that mostly disappeared before standardised monitoring took place. Here we put the recent increase in population size into a 120-year perspective, throughout three geographical divisions in the North Sea. We analysed a large range of mostly undisclosed historical data and contemporary sources. A reconstruction of Dutch commercial landings data confirms that the species used to be very abundant between 1902 ? 1920, and shows how it steadily declined from 1920 onwards until it got extirpated around 1970. Based on a quantitative analysis of standardized catch numbers from fishery-independent surveys time we conclude that the current abundance of the species is still below historical baselines and represents a local recovery at most. We further demonstrate a prominent and consistent pattern in size-distribution, with larger (mature) individuals only occurring in the northern North Sea. A large dataset on historical stomach contents from the central North Sea confirmed the diet of young common skate, which consisted predominantly of shrimps. Our review exemplifies the importance of marine historical ecology to deduce the natural richness of the North Sea. Other/Unknown Material Common skate Dipturus batis NIOZ Dataverse (Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research)
institution Open Polar
collection NIOZ Dataverse (Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research)
op_collection_id ftniozdata
language unknown
topic Earth and Environmental Sciences
Dipturus batis
Dipturus intermedius
Marine historical ecology
Shifting baselines
Number per swept area
spellingShingle Earth and Environmental Sciences
Dipturus batis
Dipturus intermedius
Marine historical ecology
Shifting baselines
Number per swept area
Bom, Roeland
A long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the North Sea
topic_facet Earth and Environmental Sciences
Dipturus batis
Dipturus intermedius
Marine historical ecology
Shifting baselines
Number per swept area
description Following decades of declines, populations of large fish recently started to increase in the North Sea, presumably due to reduced fishing pressure. However, population recovery may be too readily claimed, since standardised sampling of fish stocks commenced only in the 1970s, well after many species had already collapsed. A true recovery must be seen from a long-term perspective. The critically endangered common skate (Dipturus batis, Rajidae) species-complex is an example of a large-bodied fish that mostly disappeared before standardised monitoring took place. Here we put the recent increase in population size into a 120-year perspective, throughout three geographical divisions in the North Sea. We analysed a large range of mostly undisclosed historical data and contemporary sources. A reconstruction of Dutch commercial landings data confirms that the species used to be very abundant between 1902 ? 1920, and shows how it steadily declined from 1920 onwards until it got extirpated around 1970. Based on a quantitative analysis of standardized catch numbers from fishery-independent surveys time we conclude that the current abundance of the species is still below historical baselines and represents a local recovery at most. We further demonstrate a prominent and consistent pattern in size-distribution, with larger (mature) individuals only occurring in the northern North Sea. A large dataset on historical stomach contents from the central North Sea confirmed the diet of young common skate, which consisted predominantly of shrimps. Our review exemplifies the importance of marine historical ecology to deduce the natural richness of the North Sea.
author2 Roeland Bom
NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research in cooperation with Utrecht University
author Bom, Roeland
author_facet Bom, Roeland
author_sort Bom, Roeland
title A long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the North Sea
title_short A long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the North Sea
title_full A long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the North Sea
title_fullStr A long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the North Sea
title_full_unstemmed A long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the North Sea
title_sort long-term view on recent changes in abundance of common skate complex in the north sea
publisher NIOZ
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.25850/nioz/7b.b.rd
genre Common skate
Dipturus batis
genre_facet Common skate
Dipturus batis
op_relation https://doi.org/10.25850/nioz/7b.b.rd
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25850/nioz/7b.b.rd
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