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North Sea demersal fisheries prefer specific benthic habitats

The future protection of marine biodiversity through good conservation planning requires both the identification of key habitats with unique ecological characteristics and detailed knowledge of their human utilization through fisheries. Demersal fisheries are important disturbers of benthic habitats...

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Published in:PloS one 2018-12, Vol.13 (12), p.e0208338
Main Authors: van der Reijden, Karin J, Hintzen, Niels T, Govers, Laura L, Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D, Olff, Han
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creator van der Reijden, Karin J
Hintzen, Niels T
Govers, Laura L
Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D
Olff, Han
description The future protection of marine biodiversity through good conservation planning requires both the identification of key habitats with unique ecological characteristics and detailed knowledge of their human utilization through fisheries. Demersal fisheries are important disturbers of benthic habitats. They often have a heterogeneous spatial distribution, pressurizing particular habitats with high abundances of target species. For the North Sea, we quantified the commonness/rarity of habitats in relation to the environmental determinants of so-called fishing hotspots, to support better-informed conservation planning of benthic habitats in this intensively used continental shelf. We first distinguished 9 main seascapes in the study area based on seabed morphology. Secondly, we determined average fishing intensity and fishing hotspots using VMS-data for the three dominant Dutch fisheries from 2008 to 2015: beam-trawlers targeting sole Solea solea (Beam-Sole), beam-trawlers targeting plaice Pleuronectes platessa (Beam-Plaice), and otter-trawlers targeting Norway lobster Nephrops norvegicus and demersal fish (Otter-Mix). Within the seascapes subjected to >80% of the fishing activity, nineteen environmental factors (summarized by PCA) were used to ecologically characterize fishing hotspot locations using MaxEnt response modelling. We found that all three fisheries target highly specific, uncommon habitats. Beam-Sole fishers targeted warmer, shallow, dynamic, nearshore habitats, and within these specifically the depressions between sand ridges. Beam-Plaice fishers mainly targeted the exposed, non-muddy flanks of the Dogger Bank and similar large-scale elevations (50-75 km) where especially the ridges of smaller sand banks are used. Otter-Mix fisheries concentrated in areas with low bed shear stress, located in muddy, relatively deeper areas. This study is the first to provide insight in benthic habitat types that are frequently targeted by fishers in the North Sea. We demonstrated unequal exploitation pressure between seabed habitats, with the majority of hotspots in the less common habitats. Our results hence contribute to a more effective, ecologically informed planning for the protection and monitoring of all seabed habitats and biodiversity of the North Sea.
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Demersal fisheries are important disturbers of benthic habitats. They often have a heterogeneous spatial distribution, pressurizing particular habitats with high abundances of target species. For the North Sea, we quantified the commonness/rarity of habitats in relation to the environmental determinants of so-called fishing hotspots, to support better-informed conservation planning of benthic habitats in this intensively used continental shelf. We first distinguished 9 main seascapes in the study area based on seabed morphology. Secondly, we determined average fishing intensity and fishing hotspots using VMS-data for the three dominant Dutch fisheries from 2008 to 2015: beam-trawlers targeting sole Solea solea (Beam-Sole), beam-trawlers targeting plaice Pleuronectes platessa (Beam-Plaice), and otter-trawlers targeting Norway lobster Nephrops norvegicus and demersal fish (Otter-Mix). Within the seascapes subjected to &gt;80% of the fishing activity, nineteen environmental factors (summarized by PCA) were used to ecologically characterize fishing hotspot locations using MaxEnt response modelling. We found that all three fisheries target highly specific, uncommon habitats. Beam-Sole fishers targeted warmer, shallow, dynamic, nearshore habitats, and within these specifically the depressions between sand ridges. Beam-Plaice fishers mainly targeted the exposed, non-muddy flanks of the Dogger Bank and similar large-scale elevations (50-75 km) where especially the ridges of smaller sand banks are used. Otter-Mix fisheries concentrated in areas with low bed shear stress, located in muddy, relatively deeper areas. This study is the first to provide insight in benthic habitat types that are frequently targeted by fishers in the North Sea. We demonstrated unequal exploitation pressure between seabed habitats, with the majority of hotspots in the less common habitats. Our results hence contribute to a more effective, ecologically informed planning for the protection and monitoring of all seabed habitats and biodiversity of the North Sea.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>30562357</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0208338</doi><tpages>e0208338</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0785-9662</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0090-8348</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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issn 1932-6203
1932-6203
language eng
recordid cdi_plos_journals_2158232076
source Open Access: PubMed Central; ProQuest - Publicly Available Content Database
subjects Animals
Benthic environment
Benthos (Aquatic organisms)
Biodiversity
Biology and Life Sciences
Commercial fishing
Conservation
Conservation of Natural Resources
Continental shelves
Councils
Earth Sciences
Ecological effects
Ecological monitoring
Ecology
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Ecosystem
Environmental conditions
Environmental factors
Exploitation
Fish
Fisheries
Fisheries - statistics & numerical data
Fishing
Habitats
Humans
IMARES Onderzoeksformatie
Life sciences
Lobsters
Mammals
Marine conservation
Marine resources conservation
Morphology
Nephrops norvegicus
North Sea
Ocean floor
Onderzoeksformatie
Physical Sciences
Planning
Pleuronectes platessa
Pressurization
Principal components analysis
Research and Analysis Methods
Ridges
Sand
Sediments
Shear stress
Shellfish
Spatial distribution
Sustainable fisheries
Trawlers
WIAS
Wildlife conservation
title North Sea demersal fisheries prefer specific benthic habitats
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