Abstract
AbstractGröger, J. P., Kruse, G. H., and Rohlf, N. 2010. Slave to the rhythm: how large-scale climate cycles trigger herring (Clupea harengus) regeneration in the North Sea. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 67: 454–465. Understanding the causes of variability in the recruitment of marine fish stocks has been the “holy grail” of fisheries scientists for more than 100 years. Currently, debate is ongoing about the functionality and performance of traditional stock–recruitment functions used during stock assessments. Additionally, the European Commission requires European fishery scientists to apply the ecosystem approach to fisheries in part by integrating environmental knowledge into stock assessments and forecasts. Motivated to understand better the recent years of reproductive failures of commercially valuable North Sea herring, we studied large-scale climate changes in the North Atlantic Ocean and their potential effects on stock regeneration. Applying traffic light plots and time-series (TS) analyses, it was possible not only to explain the most recent reproductive failures, but also to reconstruct the full TS of recruitment from climate cycles, indexed by the North Atlantic Oscillation and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation. A prognostic model was developed to provide predictions of herring stock changes several years in advance, allowing recruitment forecasts to be incorporated easily into risk assessments and management strategy evaluations, to promote a sustainable herring fishery in the North Sea. Insights gained from the analysis permit reinterpretation of the sharp decline in the North Sea herring stocks in the 1970s.
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