Data_Sheet_1_Potential for Mesopelagic Fishery Compared to Economy and Fisheries Dynamics in Current Large Scale Danish Pelagic Fishery.PDF

Mesopelagic fish species represent a large potentially unexploited resource for the fishing industry and the fish meal, oil, nutraceutical, and pharmaceutical production. However, thorough investigation on ecological sustainability and socio-economic viability are fundamental prerequisites for poten...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Silvia Paoletti (718768), J. Rasmus Nielsen (11322957), Claus R. Sparrevohn (10047573), Francois Bastardie (445463), Berthe M. J. Vastenhoud (9576857)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.720897.s001
id ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/16417920
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/16417920 2023-05-15T17:38:45+02:00 Data_Sheet_1_Potential for Mesopelagic Fishery Compared to Economy and Fisheries Dynamics in Current Large Scale Danish Pelagic Fishery.PDF Silvia Paoletti (718768) J. Rasmus Nielsen (11322957) Claus R. Sparrevohn (10047573) Francois Bastardie (445463) Berthe M. J. Vastenhoud (9576857) 2021-08-24T04:28:15Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.720897.s001 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_Sheet_1_Potential_for_Mesopelagic_Fishery_Compared_to_Economy_and_Fisheries_Dynamics_in_Current_Large_Scale_Danish_Pelagic_Fishery_PDF/16417920 doi:10.3389/fmars.2021.720897.s001 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Oceanography Marine Biology Marine Geoscience Biological Oceanography Chemical Oceanography Physical Oceanography Marine Engineering catch and effort dynamics cost structures economic break even point fleet occupation fisheries economics fishing equipment pelagic fishery dynamics potential mesopelagic fishery Dataset 2021 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.720897.s001 2021-12-20T03:43:46Z Mesopelagic fish species represent a large potentially unexploited resource for the fishing industry and the fish meal, oil, nutraceutical, and pharmaceutical production. However, thorough investigation on ecological sustainability and socio-economic viability are fundamental prerequisites for potential exploitation. The current study explores the economic viability of a potential mesopelagic fishery investigating minimum catch rates, under the assumption of previous assessments of biological sustainability of such exploitation. We analyzed fishery data from the North-East Atlantic fisheries of the Danish large pelagic fleet from 2015 to 2019, by comparing the combined data on fishing dynamics and cost-structures with data from interviews of key pelagic producer organization representatives to develop scenarios of profitability. The results show full year-round fleet occupation with the ongoing fisheries, exposing the need of switching from existing activities, or investing into new vessels for conducting potential mesopelagic fishery. Economic analyses revealed that the minimum revenue to break even (zero profit) by trip varies among métiers between 60,000 and 200,000 euro showing strong positive correlation with vessel sizes. High profitability was discovered for herring, Atlantic mackerel and blue whiting fisheries while low profitability was observed for the Norway pout fishery. Due to the lack of mesopelagic fishery data, different scenarios of profitability were investigated as informed by the pelagic catch sector stakeholder perceptions of prices and costs and compared to current economic dynamics. A high break-even revenue per trip was forecasted given the increased perceived costs for fuel, modifications of gears and on-board processing methods and potential new vessel investments. High profitability may be reached if the catches exceed 220–1,060 tons per trip depending on costs and vessel storage capacity. If the conservation methods are improved from current refrigerated sea water, fishing trips could last longer than 5 days, being the major limiting economic factor for potential mesopelagic fishery. Future investigations on realistic mesopelagic catches, trip durations and spatio-temporal distribution of fisheries in relation to location, resource abundance, fishing rights, storage and conservation methods will be essential to test the robustness of the scenarios proposed in this study, and will in turn benefit of the economic requirements evaluated herein. Dataset North East Atlantic Unknown Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
catch and effort dynamics
cost structures
economic break even point
fleet occupation
fisheries economics
fishing equipment
pelagic fishery dynamics
potential mesopelagic fishery
spellingShingle Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
catch and effort dynamics
cost structures
economic break even point
fleet occupation
fisheries economics
fishing equipment
pelagic fishery dynamics
potential mesopelagic fishery
Silvia Paoletti (718768)
J. Rasmus Nielsen (11322957)
Claus R. Sparrevohn (10047573)
Francois Bastardie (445463)
Berthe M. J. Vastenhoud (9576857)
Data_Sheet_1_Potential for Mesopelagic Fishery Compared to Economy and Fisheries Dynamics in Current Large Scale Danish Pelagic Fishery.PDF
topic_facet Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
catch and effort dynamics
cost structures
economic break even point
fleet occupation
fisheries economics
fishing equipment
pelagic fishery dynamics
potential mesopelagic fishery
description Mesopelagic fish species represent a large potentially unexploited resource for the fishing industry and the fish meal, oil, nutraceutical, and pharmaceutical production. However, thorough investigation on ecological sustainability and socio-economic viability are fundamental prerequisites for potential exploitation. The current study explores the economic viability of a potential mesopelagic fishery investigating minimum catch rates, under the assumption of previous assessments of biological sustainability of such exploitation. We analyzed fishery data from the North-East Atlantic fisheries of the Danish large pelagic fleet from 2015 to 2019, by comparing the combined data on fishing dynamics and cost-structures with data from interviews of key pelagic producer organization representatives to develop scenarios of profitability. The results show full year-round fleet occupation with the ongoing fisheries, exposing the need of switching from existing activities, or investing into new vessels for conducting potential mesopelagic fishery. Economic analyses revealed that the minimum revenue to break even (zero profit) by trip varies among métiers between 60,000 and 200,000 euro showing strong positive correlation with vessel sizes. High profitability was discovered for herring, Atlantic mackerel and blue whiting fisheries while low profitability was observed for the Norway pout fishery. Due to the lack of mesopelagic fishery data, different scenarios of profitability were investigated as informed by the pelagic catch sector stakeholder perceptions of prices and costs and compared to current economic dynamics. A high break-even revenue per trip was forecasted given the increased perceived costs for fuel, modifications of gears and on-board processing methods and potential new vessel investments. High profitability may be reached if the catches exceed 220–1,060 tons per trip depending on costs and vessel storage capacity. If the conservation methods are improved from current refrigerated sea water, fishing trips could last longer than 5 days, being the major limiting economic factor for potential mesopelagic fishery. Future investigations on realistic mesopelagic catches, trip durations and spatio-temporal distribution of fisheries in relation to location, resource abundance, fishing rights, storage and conservation methods will be essential to test the robustness of the scenarios proposed in this study, and will in turn benefit of the economic requirements evaluated herein.
format Dataset
author Silvia Paoletti (718768)
J. Rasmus Nielsen (11322957)
Claus R. Sparrevohn (10047573)
Francois Bastardie (445463)
Berthe M. J. Vastenhoud (9576857)
author_facet Silvia Paoletti (718768)
J. Rasmus Nielsen (11322957)
Claus R. Sparrevohn (10047573)
Francois Bastardie (445463)
Berthe M. J. Vastenhoud (9576857)
author_sort Silvia Paoletti (718768)
title Data_Sheet_1_Potential for Mesopelagic Fishery Compared to Economy and Fisheries Dynamics in Current Large Scale Danish Pelagic Fishery.PDF
title_short Data_Sheet_1_Potential for Mesopelagic Fishery Compared to Economy and Fisheries Dynamics in Current Large Scale Danish Pelagic Fishery.PDF
title_full Data_Sheet_1_Potential for Mesopelagic Fishery Compared to Economy and Fisheries Dynamics in Current Large Scale Danish Pelagic Fishery.PDF
title_fullStr Data_Sheet_1_Potential for Mesopelagic Fishery Compared to Economy and Fisheries Dynamics in Current Large Scale Danish Pelagic Fishery.PDF
title_full_unstemmed Data_Sheet_1_Potential for Mesopelagic Fishery Compared to Economy and Fisheries Dynamics in Current Large Scale Danish Pelagic Fishery.PDF
title_sort data_sheet_1_potential for mesopelagic fishery compared to economy and fisheries dynamics in current large scale danish pelagic fishery.pdf
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.720897.s001
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre North East Atlantic
genre_facet North East Atlantic
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_Sheet_1_Potential_for_Mesopelagic_Fishery_Compared_to_Economy_and_Fisheries_Dynamics_in_Current_Large_Scale_Danish_Pelagic_Fishery_PDF/16417920
doi:10.3389/fmars.2021.720897.s001
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.720897.s001
_version_ 1766139329813413888