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      Developing reliable, repeatable, and accessible methods to provide high-resolution estimates of fishing-effort distributions from vessel monitoring system (VMS) data

      , ,
      ICES Journal of Marine Science
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Micro-scale distribution of beam trawl effort in the southern North Sea between 1993 and 1996 in relation to the trawling frequency of the sea bed and the impact on benthic organisms

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            Impact of a large-scale area closure on patterns of fishing disturbance and the consequences for benthic communities

            T Dinmore (2003)
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              A Step Towards Seascape Scale Conservation: Using Vessel Monitoring Systems (VMS) to Map Fishing Activity

              Background Conservation of marine ecosystems will require a holistic understanding of fisheries with concurrent spatial patterns of biodiversity. Methodology/Principal Findings Using data from the UK Government Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) deployed on UK-registered large fishing vessels we investigate patterns of fisheries activity on annual and seasonal scales. Analysis of VMS data shows that regions of the UK European continental shelf (i.e. Western Channel and Celtic Sea, Northern North Sea and the Goban Spur) receive consistently greater fisheries pressure than the rest of the UK continental shelf fishing zone. Conclusions/Significance VMS provides a unique and independent method from which to derive patterns of spatially and temporally explicit fisheries activity. Such information may feed into ecosystem management plans seeking to achieve sustainable fisheries while minimising putative risk to non-target species (e.g. cetaceans, seabirds and elasmobranchs) and habitats of conservation concern. With multilateral collaboration VMS technologies may offer an important solution to quantifying and managing ecosystem disturbance, particularly on the high-seas.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ICES Journal of Marine Science
                ICES Journal of Marine Science
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                1054-3139
                1095-9289
                August 11 2010
                March 04 2010
                : 67
                : 6
                : 1260-1271
                Article
                10.1093/icesjms/fsq010
                ad3f7519-8535-4adf-ab5a-3f512bc88b2c
                © 2010
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