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Deep-sea fisheries management: the approach taken by the European Union

M. Clarke[274] and K. Patterson[275]

1. INTRODUCTION

The European Union (EU) consists of 15 member states: Italy, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, United Kingdom, Denmark, Ireland, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Finland and Austria. In 2004, this number will grow as seven more countries join. In order to understand the European Union’s approach to fisheries management, it is necessary to highlight the three main political institutions.

i. The European Commission consists of commissioners appointed by member states governments, subject to the approval of the European Parliament. The Commission is the only institution that can propose EU legislation. It is also responsible for implementation and enforcement of EU legislation and it represents the EU at international organisations in areas defined by the European Treaties. The Commission has a permanent civil service of about 18 000 officials.

ii. The Council of the European Union is the main decision making body. It represents member states and its composition is variable according to the subject being treated. Normally, one minister from each member state deals with sectoral issues such as fisheries. The Council deals directly with issues such as setting annual total allowable catches.

iii. The European Parliament is composed of members directly elected by the electorates of the member states. It has the power, along with the Council to pass legislation and control the EU budget. The Parliament has a role in supervising the Commission.

The EU has a Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) that applies to all member states. There are four areas in the CFP, summarized as follows:

i. Conservation - management of fisheries, control and enforcement of regulations
ii. Structures - aids to the fishing and aquaculture
iii. Markets - common organisation of markets and
iv. Relations with third countries - fisheries agreements at international level with countries outside the EU (third countries) within regional and international fisheries organisations.

Management of deepwater fisheries before 2002, was ineffective. European deepwater fisheries developed from the 1970s onwards. Two pieces of legislation, Council Regulations 685/95 and 2027/95 imposed upper levels on the effort that could be expended on four deepwater species, roundnose grenadier (Coryphaenoides rupestris), black scabbardfish (Aphanopus carbo), orange roughy (Hoplostethus atlanticus) and Portuguese dogfish (Centroscymnus coelolepis). However, this legislation was mainly aimed at the regulation of fishing for shelf-dwelling species and was not an effective measure for deepwater fisheries. In addition, the European Union imposed minimum landing sizes for ling (Molva molva) (63 cm) and blue ling (Molva dypterygia) (70 cm) as part of Council Regulation 850/98, the legislation dealing with technical conservation measures (TCMs) for EU fisheries.

Annual negotiations with regard to relations with third countries (i.e. outside the EU) are undertaken to deal with the management of straddling stocks. Under such negotiations, quotas for deepwater fish are allocated to Norway and the Faroe Islands, while affording in exchange fishing opportunities to EU vessels to fish in the waters of these states. In the northeast Atlantic, the body that coordinates regulatory measures for fisheries in international waters is NEAFC, the Northeast Atlantic Fisheries Commission. The EU is a contracting party to NEAFC, along with Russia, Norway, Denmark (representing the Faroe Islands and Greenland), Iceland, Poland and Estonia. Some management issues relating to deepwater fisheries have been discussed at NEAFC in recent years.

At present, the EU management regime covers the fisheries in the northeast Atlantic. In the Mediterranean, fisheries management within the CFP is less developed and there is no special management system for deepwater fisheries. This paper presents the EU deepwater fisheries management regime in the northeast Atlantic and points to future directions in the management of international waters fisheries.

2. THE FISHERIES

2.1 Fisheries in the ICES area

The International Council for Exploration of the Sea (ICES) defines deepwater fisheries as those in waters deeper than 400-500 m. This definition does not distinguish what are commonly known as deep-sea fish from more traditionally targeted shelf species. For example, demersal species such as monk and megrim are often caught in depths below 400 m and could be included. Conversely, ling is found on the continental shelf and in inshore waters, but the main international fisheries are in deep waters. Blue whiting, a species normally fished in depths of around 400 m, is not usually considered as a deepwater species.

Deepwater fisheries have developed rapidly in recent years. This rapid expansion has been in response to the decline (or indeed collapse) of some traditional stocks. Some of these deepwater fisheries are long established, for example the Norwegian longline fishery for ling and tusk (Brosme brosme) (Connolly, Kelly and Clark. 1999) while others are by now well established, for example the pelagic trawl fisheries for blue whiting (Micromesistius poutassou) and greater argentine (Argentina silus (Gordon 2001). Others have developed in the last 10 years, such as the French mixed-species trawl fishery (Charuau, Du Pouy and Lorance 1995) and the Spanish deepwater longline fisheries for sharks, forkbeard (Phycis blennoides and mora (Mora moro) (Pineiro, Casas and Banon 2001). In most recent years further expansions of fishing to grounds such as Hatton Bank for Greenland halibut (Reinhardtius hippoglossoides), blue ling (Molva dypterygia) and sharks (Langedal and Hareide 2000, Pineiro, Casas and Banon 2001) have taken place. In southern parts of the ICES area, deepwater fisheries are mainly artisanal in nature. In Portugal longline fisheries for black scabbardfish and sharks have been in operation since the 1980s and in the Azores there has been an artisanal fishery for kitefin shark since the 1970s (Gordon et al. 2003). Detailed reviews of deepwater fisheries in Atlantic European waters are presented by Gordon et al. (2003) and Large and Bergstad (2005).

2.2 Fisheries in other areas

There are extensive EU deepwater fisheries in other areas, both in European waters and elsewhere. A review of current knowledge of Mediterranean deepwater fisheries is presented in STECF (2001). The longest established deepwater fishery in the world is the Madeira (Portugal) artisanal fishery for black scabbardfish, that has been in operation for several centuries (Merrett and Haedrich 1997). Elsewhere, there are fisheries for deepwater species off Mauritania (Fernandez, Salmeron and Ramos 2002). In the northwest Atlantic (NAFO area), vessels from the EU are involved in fisheries for Greenland halibut and redfish (Sebastes spp.), with a bycatch of other deepwater species. There are EU fisheries for Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) in the Southern Ocean. Little information exists on new developing fisheries outside the northeast Atlantic; this paper deals with the northeast Atlantic fisheries, because it is these that are subject to the new management regime, introduced in 2003. The scope of this paper does not extend to management of Greenland halibut and redfish because these have been managed by TAC for many years and are generally caught in different fisheries.

3. SCIENTIFIC ADVICE AND THE PROCESS OF FRAMING MANAGEMENT MEASURES

In 2000, ICES produced a document discussing possible management options for deepwater fisheries. Advice for individual species was provided based on assessments carried out by ICES SGDEEP. ICES provided advice for reductions in effort for ling, tusk, black scabbard and roundnose grenadier. The ICES advice for other species was that fisheries should only be permitted when they "expand very slowly, and are accompanied by programmes to collect data for evaluation of stock status" (ICES 2001a).

In 2001, ICES ranked the deepwater species according to their vulnerability to exploitation, based on life-history characteristics. In addition two categories of species were defined, those that were "fully or overexploited" and those that were taken in "developing, new fisheries". In 2001, ICES revised the precautionary reference points, based on fishing mortality F, spawning stock biomass (B) and total exploitable biomass (U). ICES also gave information on improvements that should be made in data collection (ICES 2001b). In 2001, the Scientific, Technical and Economic Committee for Fisheries of the European Commission (STECF) convened a subgroup to deal with management options for deepwater species in the Atlantic and Mediterranean. This group defined management areas and stated that effort control offered a better means of regulating these fisheries than catch control (STECF 2001).

In 2002, ICES (2002) advice was to reduce effort by specified percentages on ling, tusk, roundnose grenadier and black scabbard that were classified as overexploited in 2001. ICES advice for orange roughy and blue ling, in areas where they were considered to be over exploited, was that there be no directed fishing. For the remaining species, taken in "developing, new fisheries", the ICES advice was similar to that provided in 2000, that "fishing should not be allowed to expand faster than the acquisition of information necessary to provide a basis for sustainable exploitation". In the absence of updated assessments, the ICES advice was in general, a reiteration of previous advice.

In response to the scientific advice that many stocks were overexploited, the EU set about framing a management regime for deepwater fisheries. There were a number of consultations on the issue. There was an open hearing on the issue held by NEAFC in 1999 at which scientists and managers participated. In 2001, the European Commission hosted an open hearing for EU member states. Later in 2001, the European Commission announced its intention to propose a management regime.

The Commission highlighted a number of difficulties that it had in implementing the scientific advice directly identified with this advice:

Because of these issues, the Commission proposed a two-stage strategy to develop a management system. TACs were to be introduced in order to establish a resource allocation model and to assist conservation in the short term. Then a programme of actions aimed at developing a management system better tailored to the characteristics of deepwater fisheries was to be introduced. This would be developed in consultation with scientific experts, but the following elements were identified at the outset.

The Commission explained that these obligations would be attached as conditions to a specific type of fishing vessel licence. The overall fleet capacity to which licences could be granted would be limited. Only vessels holding such licences would be allowed to land significant quantities of deep-sea species. Based on the information gained, it would then be possible to develop more effective conservation measures based on effort limitation. Vulnerable areas would then be candidates for local closures or possibly effort limitations. Vessel monitoring systems (VMS) were envisaged as the principal monitoring tool.

4. MANAGEMENT MEASURES

Extensive consultations took place before the legislation was finally adopted in 2002. Two new pieces of legislation apply to European deepwater fisheries. Council Regulation 2340/2002 sets TACs and quotas for member states’ vessels for a number of deepwater species in certain areas. These catch restrictions are binding in EU waters and waters not under the jurisdiction or sovereignty of third countries. The species and ICES areas (Figure 1) covered are:

· Black scabbard

Aphanopus carbo

I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, IX, X, XII

· Argentine

Argentina silus

III, IV, V, VI, VII

· Tusk

Brosme brosme

I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, XIV

· Roundnose grenadier

Coryphaenoides rupestris

I, II, III, IV, Va, Vb, VI, VII

· Orange roughy

Hoplostethus atlanticus

VI, VII

· Blue ling

Molva dypterygia

II, III, IV, V, VI, VII

· Ling

Molva molva

I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XII, XIV

· Red seabream

Pagellus bogaraveo

VI, VII, VIII, IX, X


FIGURE 1
ICES Subareas and Divisions, including the new Divisions and Subdivisions created in 2003 to deal with deepwater fisheries related issues

This legislation provides for the allocation of fishing opportunities to member states, by way of quota shares of the TAC for the above species. Details of these TACs for EU vessels, along with the allocations by member states are given in Table 1. However, the TACs do not cover all deepwater species in the ICES area, however. These TACs are binding in EU waters and on EU vessels in international waters.

The second piece of legislation, Council Regulation 2347/2002, establishes a capacity and effort control system for deepwater fisheries. The definition of what constitutes a deepwater species is based on a list of "true" deepwater species: as far as possible those species that are found exclusively in deep water (see Table 2). Most relevant species are covered by this regulation but ling is excluded because it is extensively caught in shallow water fisheries too. A special deepwater permit allows access to catches and to land certain deepwater species. Any vessel landing more than 10 t of these species in a calendar year must carry a licence. Vessels landing less than 100 kg per trip and less than 10 t a year of the deep-sea species are exempt from having a deepwater permit.

FIGURE 2
ICES areas and Exclusive Economic Zones of coastal states in the northeast Atlantic

TABLE 1
TAC’s and quota allocations, by member state, for deepwater fish as established under the new EU deepwater fisheries management legislation (Council Regulation 2340/02)


TAC

BEL

DEN

FRA

GER

IRE

NETH

POR

SPA

SWE

UK

Others

BLACK SCABBARDFISH

I, II, III, IV (1)

30



10

10






10


V, VI, VII, XII (1)

3110



2,600

37

93



185


185

10(2)

IX, X (1)

4000







4,000





GREATER SILVER SMELT

III, IV (1)

1566


1,388

10

14

10

65



54

25


V, VI, VII (1)

6247



10

476

441

4,971




349


TUSK

I, II, XIV (1)

35



10

10






10


III (1)

40


20


10





10



(1) IV

370


100

70

30





10.00

150

10(2)

V, VI, VII (1)

710



415

10

40



35


200

10(2)

ROUNDNOSE GRENADIER

I, II, IV, Va (1)

20


2

14

2






2


III (1)

1870


1,769


10





91



V, VI, VII (1)

5106



4,396

10

346



86


258

10(2)

ORANGE ROUGHY

(1) VI

88



58


10



10


10


VII (1)

1349



1,019


300



10


10

10(2)

BLUE LING

II, IV, V (1)

138


10

61

10

10





37

10(2)

III (1)

25


10


5





10



VI, VII (1)

3678



2,788

39

10



122


709

10(2)

LING

I, II (1)

45


10

10

10






10

5(2)

III (1)

136

10

76


10





30

10


IV(1)

4666

30

467

260

289


10



20

3590


V(1)

54

14

10

10

10






10


(1)

14966

56

10

4,397

204

1,102


10

4,124


5063


RED SEABREAM

VI, VII, VIII (1)

350



14


10



281


35

10(2)

IX(1)

1271







271

1,000




X(1)

1136







1,116

10


10















Total

51,006

110

3,872

16,152

1,196

2,372

5,046

5,397

5,863

225

10,683

85

(1) Community waters and waters not under the sovereignty or jurisdiction of third countries

(2) May be taken in NAFO Divisions IF and 3K but shall be counted against the quota for V, XII, XIV within a total quota of 25000 tonnes.

(3) Community waters and areas beyond fisheries jurisdiction of other coastal States.

TABLE 2
List of defined deepwater species and additional species for which data must be collected under deepwater fisheries management legislation (Council Regulation 2347/2002)

List of species as defined in regulation

Additional species

Aphanopus carbo

black scabbardfish

Pagellus bogaraveo

red seabream

Apristurus spp.

Iceland catshark

Chimaera monstrosa

Rabbitfish

Argentina silus

greater argentine

Macrourus berglax

roughhead grenadier

Beryx spp.

Alfinsino

Mora moro

Mora

Centrophorus granulosus

gulper shark

Antimora rostrata

Antimora

Centrophorus squamosus

leafscale gulper shark

Epigonus telescopus

Cardinalfish

Centroscyllium fabricii

black dogfish

Helicolenus dactylopterus

Bluemouth

Centroscymnus coelolepis

Portuguese dogfish

Conger conger

conger eel

Coryphaenoides rupestris

roundnose grenadier

Lepidopus caudatus

Silver scabbardfish

Dalatias licha

kitefin shark

Alepocephalus bairdii

Baird’ s smoothhead

Deania calceus

birdbeak dogfish

Lycodes esmarkii

Esmark’s eelpout

Etmopterus spinax

velvet belly

Raja hyperborea

Arctic skate

Galeus melastomus

blackmouth catshark

Sebastes viviparous

small redfish

Galeus murinus

mouse catshark

Hoplostethus mediterraneus

Mediterranean roughy

Hoplostethus atlanticus

orange roughy

Trachyscorpia crsitulata

spiny scorpionfish

Molva dyptergyia

blue ling

Raja nidarosiensis

Norwegian skate

Phycis blennoides

greater forkbeard

Geryon affinis

deepwater red crab

Centroscymnus crepidater

longnose velvet dogfish

Raja fyllae

round skate

Scymnidon ringens

knifetooth shark

Hydrolagus mirabilis

large eye rabbitfish

Hexanchus griseus

sixgill shark

Rhinochimaera atlantica

straightnose rabbitfish

Chlamydoselachus anguineus

frilled shark

Alepocephalus rostratus

Risso’s smoothhead

Oxynotus paradoxus

sailfin roughshark

Polyprion americanus

Wreckfish

Somniosus microcephalus

Greenland shark



The capacity of this deepwater fleet (i.e. vessels holding deep-sea licences) is restricted to the highest aggregate engine power and gross tonnage of vessels that had caught more than 10 t of fish on the deep-sea vessel list in any one of the years 1998 1999 or 2000. In addition, there is a requirement for member states to nominate designated ports, outside of which deepwater species may not be landed. There is also provision for the use of VMS. The regulation also requires that member states deploy observers to ensure that scientific data are collected. Borges et al. (in preparation) describe one approach to implementing this aspect of the regulation.

In addition to these regulations there is further legislation dealing with deepwater fisheries management. Under bilateral agreements quotas are decided for EU vessels in Norwegian and Faroese waters, and also for Norwegian and Faroese vessels in EU waters. The Council of the European Union sets out these allocations in the annual fisheries management legislation agreed each year after negotiations within the EU, between the "Coastal States" (Norway and the Faroe Islands) and the EU and also within NEAFC. The current quotas are set out in Council Regulation 2341/02 (Table 3).

TABLE 3
Quotas for deepwater species as agreed the "Coastal States" agreements, as set out in Council Regulation 2341/02

Species

Areas

Total

FRA

GER

UK

NOR

FAR IS

Notes

1 Ling, blue ling

Vb (Faroese waters)

3,240

950

2,106

184



See 2

2 Roundnose grenadier, black scabbardfish

Vb (Faroese waters)

1,080






Maximum allowed bycatch in 1 above

3 Deepwater sharks*

IV, VI, VII (EU waters)

NA




200


Longline only

4 Blue ling, roundnose grenadier, black scabbardfish

VIa north (EU waters), VIb

NA





940

Trawl only

5 Ling

IIa, IV, Vb, VI, VII (EU waters)

NA




9,500


Interchangeable between ling and tuskup to 2,000, longline only. Provides for a bycatch of other species up to 3,000 t

6 Tusk

IIa, IV, Vb, VI, VII (EU waters)

NA




5,000



7 Ling, blue ling, tusk

VIa N, VIb (EU waters)

NA





800

Longline only. Provides for a bycatch of other species up to 75 t.

8 Greater argentine

V, VIa N, VII (west of 12 ° W) (EU waters)

NA




500


Permitted bycatch in blue whiting fishery

9 Greater argentine

V, Via N, VII (west of 12 ° W) (EU waters)

NA





see note

Unavoidable catches permitted against blue whiting quota (45,000 t)

Total


3,240

950

2,106

184

15,200

1,740 (see9)


* grey shark (sic)
black shark
birdbeak dogfish
leafscale gulper shark
greater lanternshark
smooth lanternshark (sic)
Portuguese dogfish
spurdog (catches also permitted in EU waters of IIa, IV and Vb)

The capacity of this deepwater fleet (i.e. vessels holding deep-sea licences) is restricted to the highest aggregate engine power and gross tonnage of vessels that had caught more than 10 t of fish on the deep-sea vessel list in any one of the years 1998 1999 or 2000. In addition, there is a requirement for member states to nominate designated ports, outside of which deepwater species may not be landed. There is also provision for the use of VMS. The regulation also requires that member states deploy observers to ensure that scientific data are collected. Borges et al. (2005) describe one approach to implementing this aspect of the regulation.

In addition to these regulations there is further legislation dealing with deepwater fisheries management. Under bilateral agreements quotas are decided for EU vessels in Norwegian and Faroese waters, and also for Norwegian and Faroese vessels in EU waters. The Council of the European Union sets out these allocations in the annual fisheries management legislation agreed each year after negotiations within the EU, between the "Coastal States" (Norway and the Faroe Islands) and the EU and also within NEAFC. The current quotas are set out in Council Regulation 2341/02 (Table 3).

5. FUTURE DIRECTIONS

In 2002 and 2003, a series of meetings were held to discuss possible management measures for these species in the NEAFC regulatory area, i.e. the area beyond EEZ waters in the North Atlantic. The EU made a proposal in the NEAFC to put in place a similar management régime to that described above for all the waters covered by NEAFC. This has been under discussion in NEAFC. So far, it has been agreed in NEAFC to recommend a temporary freeze on the effort that can be expended in fishing for deepwater species in international waters of the ICES area in 2002 and 2003 (the NEAFC Regulatory Area), as defined in Table 4. Effort must not exceed the highest level in previous years for each contracting party. Fishing effort was variously defined by contracting parties as aggregate power, aggregate tonnage, fishing days at sea or number of vessels that fished for these species.

TABLE 4
List of species to be considered for management in the NEAFC regulatory area

Scientific name

Common name

Aphanopus carbo

Black scabbardfish

Apristuris spp.

Iceland catshark

Argentina silus

Greater silver smelt

Beryx spp.

Alfonsinos

Brosme brosme

Tusk

Centrophorus granulosus

Gulper shark

Centrophorus squamosus

Leafscale gulper shark

Centroscyllium fabricii

Black dogfish

Centroscymnus coelolepis

Portuguese dogfish

Coryphaenoides rupestris

Roundnose grenadier

Dalatias licha

Kitefin shark

Deania calceus

Birdbeak dogfish

Etmopterus princeps

Greater lanternshark

Etmopterus spinax

Velvet belly

Galeus melastomus

Blackmouth dogfish

Galeus murinus

Mouse catshark

Hoplostethus atlanticus

Orange roughy

Molva dypterigia

Blue ling

Molva molva

Ling

Pagellus bogaraveo

Red Seabream

Phycis spp.

Forkbeards

Reinhardtius hippoglossoides

Greenland halibut

There is a need for an agreed definition of deep-sea fishing activity to be restricted, an agreed measure of effort and standard baseline for the effort freeze. Further work to develop this policy is planned for 2004.

In 2003, NEAFC began the process of collating the effort data required to calibrate a management regime in international waters. This process was difficult due in part to the lack of agreed data definitions and structures. The issues were discussed at an Extraordinary Meeting of the NEAFC in May 2003. Among the proposals for the management of the regime that the EU put forward was the deployment of scientific observers to collect biological and fisheries data in support of scientific stock assessments. The EU also proposed a standard format for the exchange of data concerning catch and effort directed at deep-sea fishing. However the Contracting Parties have not yet been able to reach an agreement on such a format.

The process of agreeing to management measures for EEZs and international waters will be a challenge for deepwater fisheries managers in the near future. It is still too early to evaluate whether the management regime that has been applied within the EU is successful.

In 2003, ICES has stated that most deepwater fish stocks were already severely depleted by 1998, and ICES suggested the use of the effort data for this year as a reference level for reductions for such stocks (ICES, in prep.). Given the urgency of the situation, it will be necessary to achieve a harmonized management system for deepwater fisheries in the northeast Atlantic as quickly as possible.

6. LITERATURE CITED

Borges, L., M. Clarke, E. Rogan & R. Officer. Deepwater trawl and longline sampling levels. Poster. In: Shotton, R. (Ed). Deep Sea 2003: Conference on the Governance and Management of Deep-sea Fisheries, Conference Poster Papers (1-5 December 2003, Queenstown) and Workshop Papers (27-29 November 2003, Dunedin) New Zealand. FAO Fisheries Proceedings. No. 3/2. Rome, FAO (in preparation).

Charuau, A., H. Du Pouy & P. Lorance 1995. French exploitation of the deepwater fisheries of the north Atlantic. In Proceedings of NATO Advanced Workshop on deepwater fisheries of the north Atlantic Slope. (Ed. A.L. Hopper). Amsterdam: Kluwer. 337-356.

Connolly, P.L., C.K. Kelly & M.W. Clarke 1999. Longline survey of the eastern slopes of the Rockall Trough. Dublin: Marine Institute Fisheries Leaflet, No. 180.

Fernandez, L., F. Salmeron & A. Ramos 2002. Evolution of elasmobranch bycatch from the Spanish deepwater black hake trawling fishery off Mauritania. NAFO SC Document.

Gordon, J.D.M., O.A. Bergstad, I. Figueiredo & G. Menezes 2003. Deepwater Fisheries of the Northeast Atlantic: I. Description and Current Trends. Journal of Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Science, 31, 137-150.

ICES 2001a. Report of the ICES Advisory Committee on Fishery Management 2000. ICES Cooperative Research Report No. 242.

ICES 2001b. Report of the ICES Advisory Committee on Fishery Management 2001. ICES Cooperative Research Report No. 246.

ICES 2002. Report of the ICES Advisory Committee on Fishery Management 2002. ICES Cooperative Research Report No. 256.

ICES in prep. Report of the ICES Advisory Committee on Fishery Management 2003. ICES Cooperative Research Report.

Langedal, G. & N.R. Hareide 2000. Rapport fra Forsoksfiske med line pa Hatton Bank. Bergen: Directorate of Fisheries. Unpublished Report.

Large, P.A. & O.A. Bergstad 2005. Deepwater fish resources in the northeast Atlantic: fisheries, state of knowledge on biology and ecology and recent developments in stock assessment and management. In Shotton, R. (Ed). Deep Sea 2003: Conference on the Governance and Management of Deep-sea Fisheries, Queenstown, New Zealand, 1-5 December 2003. FAO Fisheries Proceedings. No. 3/1. Rome, FAO. pp.149-161.

Merrett, N.R. & R.L. Haedrich 1997. Deep-sea Demersal Fish and Fisheries. London: Chapman Hall. 283 pp.

Pineiro, C.G., M. Casas & R. Banon 2001. The deepwater fisheries exploited by Spanish fleets in the Northeast Atlantic: a review of the current status. Fisheries Research, 51: 311-320.

STECF 2001. Deep-sea fisheries. Report of SGFEN of the Scientific, Technical and Economic Committee for Fisheries of the European Commission. 123 pp.


[274] Marine Institute
GTP Parkmore, Galway, Ireland
<[email protected]>
[275] European Commission, Fisheries Directorate General
Rue Joseph II, B-1049 Brussels, Belgium
<[email protected]>

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