The available database comprises research projects in Fisheries, Aquaculture, Seafood Processing and Marine Biotechnology active in the time period 2003-2022.
BlueBio is an ERA-NET COFUND created to directly identify new and improve existing ways of bringing bio-based products and services to the market and find new ways of creating value from in the blue bioeconomy.

More information on the BlueBio project and participating funding organizations is available on the BlueBio website: www.bluebioeconomy.eu

Last Update: 2024/06/19

WESTHER
Fisheries
A multidisciplinary approach for the identification of herring stocks (Clupea harengus L.) west of the British Isles using biological tags and genetic markers
FP5
European
NA
NA
UOA - University of Aberdeen (United Kingdom)
BFAFi - Federal Research Centre for Fisheries (Germany)MI - Marine Institute (Ireland)UCC - University College Cork (Ireland)UNILIV - University of Liverpool (United Kingdom)
2003
2006
€ 2,084,887
https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/Q5RS-2002-01056/pl
Herring are important in EU commercial fisheries. They are highly migratory and it is not uncommon for them to be caught in management areas outside their area of origin. Assessment of stocks under these circumstances is problematic. The project aims to describe the inter-relationships of herring stocks to the west of the British Isles through a combination of traditional and novel biological tools and multivariate statistical techniques, to provide a framework for discriminating between stocks. The research, therefore, aims to provide an unambiguous classification of herring in the catch, such that they can be assigned to their areas of origin. This will provide the basis for a sound assessment for the management and the conservation of biodiversity. Of the different methods of stock discrimination used in this research project (i.e. morphometrics/meristics, genetics, parasitology, analysis of otolith microstructure and microchemistry), the morphometric work packages showed to have the highest success in allocating individual fish correctly to the spawning sample (stock) they were taken from. This holds true for both body- and otolith morphometry. Both morphometric analyses are based on digital images taken in a highly standardised fashion, allowing for a cost-cutting separation of the sampling and the actual process of analysis. A somewhat lower success in correct re-allocation was achieved by the analysis of the otolith microchemistry, while the analysis of fish parasites did not so much allow for an allocation of the adults to spawning groups but could in some cases pinpoint the aggregations of juvenile fish that these once must have been part of. The genetic analyses of the fish and their parasites did not facilitate an allocation of fish to spawning stocks, indicating a high degree of interbreeding, and the analysis of otolith microstructure expectedly supplied information on the timing of hatch of the individual fish but gave no clues as to their geographical origin. A fist analysis of the results indicates that the fish subject to a commercial fishery on the feeding grounds originates from the spawning grounds in the relative vicinity while in the northernmost of the management areas investigated (ICES VIaN) a large proportion of the fish probably has been spawned in the North Sea.
Fish; Herring; Stock assessment; Fish stocks; Fish biology;
Southwest of Ireland-East (27.VIIj) Northwest Coast of Scotland and North Ireland (27.VIa) West of Ireland (27.VIIb)
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If there is any incorrect or missing information on this project please access here or contact bluebio.database@irbim.cnr.it
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