ICES advises on sustainable management of fish stocks and marine ecosystems -
How?
Colm Lordan ICES Advisory Committee
Vice-Chair
My background• Life long fisheries scientist!
• PhD in fisheries science University College Cork
• 20 Years experience in the Irish Marine Institute
• Deep sea fisheries
• Tuna
• Nephrops stocks
• Demersal fish
• Participant in ~ 70 ICES expert groups (Chaired 16)
• Vice Chair of ACOM for since Jan 2018. @ColmPers@ICES_ASC@MarineInst
Todays talk
• What is ICES?
• Context of the advice?
• How is ICES advice produced?
• Data
• How does ICES assess the state of fish stocks?
• Precautionary and MSY Reference Points
• ICES and the ecosystem approach
• Global organization that develops science and advice to support the sustainable use of the seas and oceans
• Network of 5000 experts from 700 institutes and organizations
• 1500 experts participate in the activities annually
• ICES provides best available, scientific advice to international & national authorities
• Advice on over 240 fish stocks, bycatch advice, deep sea impact, vulnerable marine habitats, marine protected areas and other marine ecosystem related advice
• Recurrent - yearly advice: On fishing opportunities on more than 240 stocks On ecosystem impacts of fishing activities Ecosystem and Fisheries Overviews – in ecoregions
• Other advice: special requests on marine ecosystems: e.g. impacts of fisheries,
pressures and impacts on seafloor, evaluation of fisheries management strategies, impacts of climate change on fish stocks, evaluation of vulnerable marine habitats
•Fish are a LIMITED, MOBILE and PUBLIC resource
•excessive exploitation leads to reduced productivity and possible irreversible damage
• fisheries in one MS impacts the fishing opportunities of other MS
• public resource exploited by the fishing industry
Internationally-coordinated management required for sustainable fisheries
International agreements
•Global agreements
• Policy of the clients of the advice (commissions, governments)
Policy objectives
• Precautionary Approach (PA)
•Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY)
• Ecosystem-based approach
International agreements and policies:• UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS 1982) -MSY• UN Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED, 1992) -precautionary approach• UN Straddling Fish Stocks Agreement of 1995 (UNFSA 1995) - precautionary approach• Convention on Biological Diversity (UN CBD, 1992) - ecosystem approach• Johannesburg Declaration of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD UN 2002)-
ecosystem approach & MSY
National and regional legislation:including CFP, MSFD, Norwegian Marine Resources Act, Russian Federal Law on Fisheries, Icelandic Fisheries Management Act, Faroe Islands Fisheries Management Act
ICES Advisory Committee (ACOM) is responsible of delivering ICES advice
• ACOM responds to requests for advice from ICES member countries, international commissions and organizations, and fisheries and ecosystem management bodies
• The advice is based on the precautionary principle and the ecosystem approach, conforming to the management objectives of those authorities
• ACOM works with stakeholders to ensure that the advice is understandable and relevant to society
• ACOM consists of a Chair, four Vice-Chairs, and 20 members (one representative from each of our 20 member countries)
http://www.ices.dk/community/groups/Pages/ACOM.aspx
Letter of Agreement with the European Commission
The North Sea and Skagerrak Assessment Working Group with nominated experts from 10 countries meet to analyze and assess the status of stocks -> provide the ICES Advisory Committee (ACOM) with a basis for the advice
Peer Audit of data andmethods.
Independent review of methods at periodic benchmark
ICES AdvisoryCommittee (ACOM) advice drafting group formulates the advice > the advice is finalized and appovred by ACOM-> sent to the advicerequester and published on the ICES website
Example: North Sea Sole
Data Collection -MAP
Information from fish
• Length
• Weight
• Age
Information on population trends: surveys
• Trawls• Acoustics• Plankton• UWTV
Research vessels & industry
Information from catch
• Amount• Location• Timing• Bycatch
From ports, log books & observers
How do we use this information?Take a stock of fish:
Every stock has underlying structure
Add fishing…
Mortality rate
Change in thenumbers at age
We also measure the catch
Population
Relationship????
Landings or Catch
Numbers-at-age
Surveys
Stock
Assessment
Models
Logbooks
Fishery
Trends in populations from surveys & catches.
Weak cohort Strong cohort
This produces a stock assessment
North Sea herring
Reference pointsPrecautionary Approach
Populations need to be maintained within safe biological limits -Certain that reproductive success is not impaired
ICES Precautionary Approach
Blim limit reference points associated with reduced reproductive capacity
Bpa precautionary reference points: “buffers” to account for assessment uncertainty
Maximising Yield•Yield curve shows yield as function of fishing mortality or fishing effort
MSY
Fishing mortality or effort
Yield
FMSY
Fcrash
Reference pointsmaximum sustainable yield (MSY)
ICES interpretation of MSY is maximization of average long-term yield from sustainable stocks
Reference pointsmaximum sustainable yield (MSY)
Ecosystem Approach
To provide the advice for next year’s catches
We project forward with our best knowledge(maturity, growth, recruits, impact of fishing gear, natural death etc.) across a range of fishing scenarios.
Hierarchy of Advice
Advice is based on clients requestsand is consistent with their policy objectives and frameworks:e.g. EU MAP
Taking into account precautionaryand MSY objectives
~100 stocks Cat 1~80 Stocks Cat 3~ 70 Stocks Cat 4, 5, 6
http://www.ices.dk/sites/pub/Publication%20Reports/Advice/2018/2018/Introduction_to_advice_2018.pdf
Scenarios set out in management plans
All management strategies in the ICES area are tested using simulations
ICES MBlimSY approach for Category 1 stocks
Maximize long term average yield while safeguarding against low SSB
MSY Btrigger: lower end of biomass fluctuation expected when fishing at FMSY
MSY Btrigger
FMSY
SSB at start of advisory year
more cautionneededbelow Blim
F
ICES Advice Rule
MSY reference points are capped so that advice from MSY approach is also precautionary
Hake – Northern stock (3.a, 4, 6, 7, 8.abd)
• Spawning stock increased significantly since 2006 and it is well above historical estimates.
• Fishing pressure below FMSY since 2012
• Recruitment is variable without trend. Recent recruitment is uncertain.
• Catch 2018: 96 188 t of which 7% discards
Advice for 2020: MSY: Catch ≤ 104 763 t
Hake – Northern stock (3.a, 4, 6, 7, 8.abd)
F(2019) = 0.24 (Recent average fishing pressure (2016-2018));SSB (2020)= 276 565 t > MSYBtrigger (56 000 t) FMSY= 0.26
Bas isTotal catch
(2020)
Wanted
catch
(2020)
Unwanted
catch(2020
)
Ftotal (2020)Fwanted
(2020)
Funwanted
(2020)SSB (2021)
% SSB
change **
% Advice
change
***
MSY approach = FMSY 104763 97949 6814 0.26 0.21 0.048 263204 −5% −26%
EU MAP ^: FMSY 104763 97949 6814 0.26 0.21 0.048 263204 −5% −26%F = MAP FMSY lower 76334 71455 4878 0.18 0.147 0.033 290273 5% −46%F = MAP FMSY upper 147839 137934 9905 0.4 0.33 0.074 222251 −20% 4%F = 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 363109 31% −100%
Fpa 197127 183380 13747 0.6 0.49 0.111 175485 −37% 39%
Flim 241643 224025 17618 0.84 0.68 0.155 133316 −52% 70%
SSB (2021) = B lim 339516 310343 29174 2 1.64 0.37 40037 −86% 139%
SSB (2021) = Bpa 323035 296383 26652 1.66 1.35 0.31 56000 −80% 127%
SSB (2021) = MSY Btrigger 323035 296383 26652 1.66 1.35 0.31 56000 −80% 127%
F = F2019 97699 91373 6326 0.24 0.195 0.044 269927 -2% −31%
EU Recovery Plan ^^ 101394 94814 6580 0.25 0.2 0.046 266410 −4% −29%
ICES advice bas is
Other scenarios
Principles of EBM
• management of human activities
• consideration of collective pressures
• achievement of good environmental status
• sustainable use
• optimization of benefits among diverse societal goals
• regionalization
• trade-offs
• stewardship for future generations
http://www.ices.dk/explore-us/Documents/ICES%20and%20EBM.pdfhttps://www.ices.dk/community/advisory-process/Pages/ICES-ecosystems-and-advisory-areas.aspx
ICES ecoregions
Resource management & biodiversity conservation objectives
• ICES is the science adviser to NEAFC and answers annual requests from OSPAR.
• NEAFC and OSPAR work together through their “collective arrangement”
• ICES is a key science advisor to both EU DGMARE (CFP) and EU DGENV (MSFD and Habitats & Birds Directives)
https://www.ospar.org/about/international-cooperation/collective-arrangement
Advice must be consistent across objectives, & bridge underlining paradigms
Making advice for EBFM operational…(Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management)
1. Influence of a dynamic ecosystem on fisheries
2. Impact of fisheries on the ecosystem
3. Put fisheries into context of other maritime activities & pressures
4. Consequences of tradeoffs between management objectives
1. Influence of a dynamic ecosystem on fisheries
• Where appropriate, account for productivity changes in stocks (recruitment, growth, natural mortality) in stock assessments, forecasts & reference points
• Consider changes & overlaps in distribution of stocks in advice
• Where appropriate, consider alternative productivity scenarios in management strategy evaluations (MSEs)
• Account for consequences of catches from mixed fisheries in advice
2. Impact of fisheries on the ecosystem
Develop metrics & report on
• Occurrence & impact of bycatch in fisheries
• Fisheries impact on & services from seabed, including vulnerable marine ecosystems (VMEs)
• Synthesizes of status of fish stocks in an ecoregion
3. Put fisheries into context of other maritime activities & pressures• Determine the priority anthropogenic pressures in an
ecoregion
• Develop metrics & report on trends in species biodiversity & ecosystem structure
• Provide information & methods for Ecologically or Biologically Significant Marine Areas (EBSAs) designation
• Contribute to assessments of threatened/endangered species & habitats
• Monitor & report the occurrence of invasive species
4. Consequences of tradeoffs between management objectives
• Integrated ecosystem assessment groups explore suites of management objectives in each ecoregion
• Tools developed for comparing the consequences for tradeoffs between objectives
• Stakeholder engagement to explore methods, ideas & consequences
• Practical application to advice – seabed impact, MSFD & mixed fisheries
Exampleshttps://www.ices.dk/sites/pub/Publication%20Reports/Advice/2017/Special_requests/eu.2017.13.pdfhttp://www.ices.dk/sites/pub/Publication%20Reports/Advice/2018/2018/mix-cs.pdfhttps://www.ices.dk/community/groups/Pages/WKIrish.aspx
Publishing this advice…
2. Impact of fisheries on the ecosystem
1. Influence of a dynamic ecosystem on fisheries
3. Put fisheries into context of other maritime activities & pressures
https://www.ices.dk/community/advisory-process/Pages/fisheries-overviews.aspxhttps://www.ices.dk/community/advisory-process/Pages/Ecosystem-overviews.aspx
Celtic Sea Fisheries Overview
State of the stocks Celtic Sea Fisheries Overview
North Sea Ecosystem Overview
Figure 3 Greater North Sea ecoregion overview with the major regional pressures, human activities, and state of the ecosyste
North Sea Ecosystem Overview
Oil and Gas installations Net Primary productivity
Summary• A global marine science organization providing for impartial evidence
based advice
• The advice is consistent with policy objectives: PA, MSY and EBM
• Engine room is ~1500 active experts, final advice approved by ACOM
• Data collection is the cornerstone of providing the evidence base
• Population models provide historical stock development; F, SSB and R
• Reference Points are used to evaluate stock status
• Short term projections are used to calculate TACs
• Longer term simulations are used to evaluate management strategies
• Fisheries and ecosystem overviews synthesis knowledge at and ecoregion scale
www.ices.dk