Magnusson, Katarina
- Department of Aquatic Resources (SLU Aqua), Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2021Peer reviewedOpen access
Magnusson, Katarina; Dekker, Willem
The European eel stock is in a multi-decadal decline. When fishing yield diminished throughout Europe, the small-scaled fyke-net fishery for eel on the west coast of Sweden gradually increased. This contrary trend lasted from the early-1900s, until the 1990s when fishing restrictions eventually limited the catch. We identified the processes driving this aberrant historical development. Using data on the fisheries from 1914 to 2006, we analysed the relation of total landed quantities to stock abundance indices, weather conditions, technical development, and market indicators. No relation between landed volumes and abundance indices was found, but market price (inflation-adjusted) was clearly correlated. Weather and technical development had a minor influence on landed volumes. This indicates that the commercial eel fishery on the west coast developed due to increasing demand and increasing eel prices. We found no evidence that the local stock has been fully exploited, though the increasing catch must have gradually reduced the contribution to the international spawning stock. These results stress the importance of considering economic processes when interpreting historical catch data as a source of information on population size in stock assessments, and ultimately, understanding the collapse of the eel stock.
Anguilla; economic development; European eel; fishery; stock decline
ICES Journal of Marine Science
2021, Volume: 78, number: 1, pages: 185-198
Coastal and sea areas
Use of FOMA data
Ecology
History
Fish and Aquacultural Science
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsaa213
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/109158