Updating Fisheries Sensitivity Maps in British Waters
The requirement to display sensitive areas relating to the life history of commercially important fish species in British waters is well recognized. Sensitive areas have previously been described as spawning and nursery grounds. Here we consider only areas where there is evidence of aggregations of 0 group fish and/or larvae of key commercial species. 0 group fish are defined as fish in the first year of their lives. These fish sensitivity maps were originally generated to provide a spatial and temporal description of where physical damage could potentially occur to fish species at sensitive stages in essential habitats of their life cycle. Sources of damage in this context referred to seismic surveying conducted by the offshore Oil and Gas industry during their site investigations. In addition to the acoustic energy that the seismic survey activities generate, we should now add other percussive impact noises from pile driving seabed foundation pins into the seabed, such as those required for offshore renewable energy sites. The spatial location of these fish life history events and their potential interaction with offshore industries can heavily influence the planning, costs and delivery of these offshore developments. It is imperative that these maps reflect the current extent of these areas.
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Citation proposal
Marine Scotland (Scottish Government) (2014) . Updating Fisheries Sensitivity Maps in British Waters. https://services.mspdata.eu:/geonetwork/srv/api/records/Marine_Scotland_FishDAC_1555 |
Simple
- Alternate title
- Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Volume 5 Number 10
- Date ( Publication )
- 2014-12-19
- Identifier
- Marine_Scotland_FishDAC_1555
Point of contact
Scottish Government
-
Marine Scotland
(Marine Scotland GIS team )
Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Victoria Road
Aberdeen
AB11 9DB
United Kingdom
Originator
Scottish Government
-
Marine Scotland
(Marine Scotland GIS team )
Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Victoria Road
Aberdeen
AB11 9DB
United Kingdom
Custodian
Scottish Government
-
Marine Scotland
(Marine Scotland GIS team )
Marine Scotland Science, Marine Laboratory, 375 Victoria Road
Aberdeen
AB11 9DB
United Kingdom
- Maintenance and update frequency
- notPlanned Not planned
- GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0 ( Theme )
-
- Species distribution
- Use limitation
- The following attribution statement must be used: Contains information from Scottish Government (Marine Scotland) licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
- Access constraints
- otherRestrictions Other restrictions
- Other constraints
- no limitations to public access
- Distance
- 1000 metres
- Metadata language
- eng English
- Topic category
-
- Environment
- Oceans
N
S
E
W
))
- Geographic identifier
-
The correct value is not known to, and not computable by, the sender of this data. However, a correct value probably exists.
- Date ( Revision )
- 2010-01-01
- Supplemental Information
- Coull, K.A., Johnstone, R., and Rogers, S.I. (1998). Fisheries Sensitivity Maps in British Waters. Published and distributed by UKOOA Ltd., Aberdeen, 58 pp.
- Reference system identifier
- OGP / WGS84
- Distribution format
-
- GeoTIFF (1.0 )
- OnLine resource
- DOI:https://dx.doi.org/10.7489/1555-1
- OnLine resource
- National Marine Plan Interactive (NMPi) WMS Get Capabilities
- Hierarchy level
- dataset Dataset
- Statement
- Data on the distribution of fish species in British waters are collected yearly through the regular stock monitoring surveys as conducted by European marine research institutes in their role as fisheries data suppliers to the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES). Data used for this update have again been taken from various of these available sources including the National and International Bottom Trawl Surveys (BTS, IBTS), Beam Trawl Surveys (BTS) and International Herring Larval Surveys (IHLS). In addition to these, commercial fishing observer trips and stand-alone surveys to investigate particular issues have provided further data on the distribution of 0 group fish of relevant species. As well as new and additional data, different data analysis techniques have been used to generate alternative outputs from the existing survey datasets. The principal analysis technique used was Species Distribution Modelling (SDM), also known as Habitat Suitability Models or Ecological Niche Models. These models combine observations of species occurrence or abundance with environmental data
Metadata
- File identifier
- Marine_Scotland_FishDAC_1555 XML
- Metadata language
- eng English
- Hierarchy level
- dataset Dataset
- Date stamp
- 2018-06-22
- Metadata standard name
- ISO 19115:2003/19139
- Metadata standard version
- 1.0