Deepwater fisheries pose particular difficulties for management. Target species are difficult to assess and they are generally vulnerable to overfishing. The EU project DEEPFISHMAN will develop a short- and long-term monitoring and management framework for deepwater fisheries in the NE Atlantic that will take account of these factors. Firstly, the aim will be to identify new and more effective assessment methods, reference points, control rules and management strategies to be used in the short term, making better use of available data. Secondly, a reliable long-term framework will be developed for which additional data needs will be specified in order to fill current information gaps to achieve reliable long-term management requirements. This work will be developed by examining a range of case studies selected to reflect the diverse characteristics of the different types of deepwater fishery. The socioeconomic profile and projected impact of the management strategy options will be examined. The project outputs will aim to provide robust guidelines for deepwater fisheries management suitable for adoption within the Common Fishery policy.
See also http://wwz.ifremer.fr/deepfishman
Contribution from stakeholders is essential, this questionnaire intends to identify the stakeholder community of the project for further communication and integration of stakeholder views in the project.
Deliverable D8.6 Consensus report from the stakeholder workshop in Brussels, 29-30 June 2009
Report of the stakeholder workshop in Lisbon, 4 December 2009
this links to a site only accessible to project partners
Abstract (to be presented at the 14th Panhellenic Ichthyologists Symposium - Athens, May 2010)
Marine Research Institute (MRI), ICELAND
Institute of Economic Studies, University of Iceland, ICELAND
Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas), UK
Institute of Marine Research (IMR), Norway
Spanish Institute of Oceanography (IEO), SPAIN
Fisheries and Food Technological Institute (AZTI), SPAIN
Hellenic Centre for Marine Research (HCMR), GREECE
Imperial College London(IMPERIAL), UK
National Institute of Biological Resource (IPIMAR), PORTUGAL
National Marine Information and Research Center (NatMIRC), NAMIBIA
Link to the UK project DEEPFISH, final reports available in English, French and Spanish
EU DG MARE studies and reports
Identification guide This links to two electronic books (PDF in English and French) for identification of Chondrichthyans (sharks, rays, chimaeras) and Actinopterygians (bony fishes). These are not identification keys, they include numerous photos, in particular photos of deep-water sharks.
NICE BLOG ABOUT RESEARCH, NEW DISCOVERIES AND OTHER STUFF CONCERNING DEEP SEA BIOLOGY
Amazing Photographs of Rabbit Fish (Chimaera monstrosa) on ARKive
12th Deep-Sea Biology Symposium was held in Reykjavik, Iceland 7-11th June