Defining fishing grounds with vessel monitoring system data

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Abstract

Methods for defining fishing grounds to support marine spatial planning and management are developed, applied, and compared. The methods are broadly applicable and repeatable because they use vessel monitoring system (VMS) data that are archived and increasingly accessible. For several fleets at regional and national scales, an attempt is made to assess how the choice of criteria for defining grounds influences (i) size, shape, and location, (ii) overlap among grounds, and (iii) the extent to which annual and multi-annual patterns of fishing activity describe grounds used seasonally or by individual vessels. The results show that grounds defined by excluding infrequently fished margins (areas with <10 of total fishing activity) are typically 50 smaller than total fished area. However, landings weight or value (LWV) per unit activity can be higher at the margins, with 10 of activity usually accounting for 1020 of LWV. The removal of fishing activity in the margins, as a consequence of regulation or fleet behaviour, would lead to disproportionately greater reductions in interactions with other fisheries, sectors, and the environment. Accessible high-resolution information on the "anatomy" of all fishing grounds would better inform debates on the allocation and the use of marine space and the integration of fisheries and environmental management. © 2011 International Council for the Exploration of the Sea. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

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APA

Jennings, S., & Lee, J. (2012). Defining fishing grounds with vessel monitoring system data. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 69(1), 51–63. https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsr173

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