Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Aran, Galway Bay and Slyne Head Nephrops Grounds 2009 UWTV Survey Report

Lordan, C
Doyle, J
Citations
Altmetric:
Keywords
Date
2009-09
Publisher
Marine Institute
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
The prawn (Nephrops norvegicus) are common around the Irish coast occurring in geographically distinct sandy/muddy areas were the sediment is suitable for them to construct their burrows. The Irish Nephrops fishery is extremely valuable with landings in recent years worth around €30m at first sale supporting an important indigenous processing industry. The Nephrops fishery “at the back of the Aran Islands” can be considered the mainstay of the Ros a Mhíl fleet. Without this Nephrops fishery the majority of vessels in the fleet would cease being economically viable (Meredith, 1999). Given these socio-economic realities, good scientific information on stock status to enable sustainable management of the resources are urgently required. This is the eight data point in a time series of UWTV surveys on the ‘Aran grounds’. The survey covers three distinct mud patches; the Aran Ground, Galway Bay and Slyne Head. These have approximate areas of 940, 41 and 26sq.km respectively. In 2009 this survey was used to develop catch options for the stock using a bias corrected survey estimate as an absolute measure of stock size and recent discard rates and mean weight to forecast catch (ICES, 2009a). This report details the results of the 2009 survey and updates the catch option table using the most recent survey estimate.
Description
Use the URI link below to search the Marine Institute Data Discovery Catalogue for datasets relevant to this report.
Funder
Citation
Lordan, C. & Doyle, J., "Aran, Galway Bay and Slyne Head Nephrops Grounds 2009 UWTV Survey Report", Marine Institute 2009
Embedded videos