Barents Sea capelin and us; Do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? Or have we become prisoners in our own Platonic allegory? How shall we respond?

Capelin (Mallotus Villosus) are an important component of the Barents Sea ecosystem. As zooplankton consumers they play a role in channelling energy up the food web, and they have the potential to represent a biomass of several million tonnes. Their population has undergone booms and crashes, as one...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Seal, Henry
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Bergen 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18065
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author Seal, Henry
author_facet Seal, Henry
author_sort Seal, Henry
collection University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB)
description Capelin (Mallotus Villosus) are an important component of the Barents Sea ecosystem. As zooplankton consumers they play a role in channelling energy up the food web, and they have the potential to represent a biomass of several million tonnes. Their population has undergone booms and crashes, as one may expect of a high production, high mortality species, and our management of the fishery is based around preventing a >5% chance that the spawning stock biomass will fall below 200,000 tonnes. They are surveyed in the autumn, before a maturity model is applied and natural mortality is factored in during their migration to the spawning sites, leaving a total allowable catch (TAC). Our present model is a simple cut off of 14cm, and anything longer is assumed to spawn that year. This may be too simplistic however, as it possibly does not reflect the biological situation on the ground, which could lead to miscalculations of the spawning stock and the accompanying TAC. In this investigation I used the survey data and catch data in a comparison to assess the 14cm cut off, and following this made models which would better reflect the length and age distributions seen in the catch. Its seems likely that the biomass of capelin migrating has been overestimated every year, and that we need to do further work to assess the spawning stock in order to get a better handle on capelin maturity. Master's Thesis in Biology MAMN-BIO BIO399
format Master Thesis
genre Barents Sea
Barentshav*
genre_facet Barents Sea
Barentshav*
geographic Barents Sea
Tac
geographic_facet Barents Sea
Tac
id ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/18065
institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.517,-59.517,-62.500,-62.500)
op_collection_id ftunivbergen
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18065
op_rights Copyright the Author. All rights reserved
publishDate 2018
publisher The University of Bergen
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/18065 2025-01-16T21:11:41+00:00 Barents Sea capelin and us; Do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? Or have we become prisoners in our own Platonic allegory? How shall we respond? Seal, Henry 2018-06-14T22:00:11Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18065 eng eng The University of Bergen https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18065 Copyright the Author. All rights reserved Bestandsanalyse Fiskebestander Fiskeriforskning Fiskeriforvaltning Lodder Barentshavet https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013049 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004185 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004087 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c030943 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013664 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013662 751999 Master thesis 2018 ftunivbergen 2023-03-14T17:42:35Z Capelin (Mallotus Villosus) are an important component of the Barents Sea ecosystem. As zooplankton consumers they play a role in channelling energy up the food web, and they have the potential to represent a biomass of several million tonnes. Their population has undergone booms and crashes, as one may expect of a high production, high mortality species, and our management of the fishery is based around preventing a >5% chance that the spawning stock biomass will fall below 200,000 tonnes. They are surveyed in the autumn, before a maturity model is applied and natural mortality is factored in during their migration to the spawning sites, leaving a total allowable catch (TAC). Our present model is a simple cut off of 14cm, and anything longer is assumed to spawn that year. This may be too simplistic however, as it possibly does not reflect the biological situation on the ground, which could lead to miscalculations of the spawning stock and the accompanying TAC. In this investigation I used the survey data and catch data in a comparison to assess the 14cm cut off, and following this made models which would better reflect the length and age distributions seen in the catch. Its seems likely that the biomass of capelin migrating has been overestimated every year, and that we need to do further work to assess the spawning stock in order to get a better handle on capelin maturity. Master's Thesis in Biology MAMN-BIO BIO399 Master Thesis Barents Sea Barentshav* University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB) Barents Sea Tac ENVELOPE(-59.517,-59.517,-62.500,-62.500)
spellingShingle Bestandsanalyse
Fiskebestander
Fiskeriforskning
Fiskeriforvaltning
Lodder
Barentshavet
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013049
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004185
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004087
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c030943
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013664
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013662
751999
Seal, Henry
Barents Sea capelin and us; Do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? Or have we become prisoners in our own Platonic allegory? How shall we respond?
title Barents Sea capelin and us; Do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? Or have we become prisoners in our own Platonic allegory? How shall we respond?
title_full Barents Sea capelin and us; Do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? Or have we become prisoners in our own Platonic allegory? How shall we respond?
title_fullStr Barents Sea capelin and us; Do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? Or have we become prisoners in our own Platonic allegory? How shall we respond?
title_full_unstemmed Barents Sea capelin and us; Do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? Or have we become prisoners in our own Platonic allegory? How shall we respond?
title_short Barents Sea capelin and us; Do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? Or have we become prisoners in our own Platonic allegory? How shall we respond?
title_sort barents sea capelin and us; do they really mature and migrate at 14cm? or have we become prisoners in our own platonic allegory? how shall we respond?
topic Bestandsanalyse
Fiskebestander
Fiskeriforskning
Fiskeriforvaltning
Lodder
Barentshavet
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013049
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004185
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004087
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c030943
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013664
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013662
751999
topic_facet Bestandsanalyse
Fiskebestander
Fiskeriforskning
Fiskeriforvaltning
Lodder
Barentshavet
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013049
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004185
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004087
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c030943
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013664
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013662
751999
url https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18065