2006 Strategic Environmental Assessment SEA7 An Overview of Cephalopods Relevant to the SEA7 Area (NE Atlantic west of Scotland)

This report is a contribution to the Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA7) conducted by the Department of Trade and Industry (now Department of Energy and Climate Change).The class Cephalopoda comprises three major divisions, of which two: Decapoda (squids and cuttlefish) and Octopoda (octopods) are represented in the SEA 7 Area. They are highly developed, but short-lived molluscs with rapid growth rates. They are important elements in marine food webs and interact significantly with marine mammals, seabirds and commercially exploited finfish species. They also represent a promising future fishery resource in terms of market value, abundance and growth potential.

At present, only an estimated 10% of exploitable stocks are utilised worldwide. There are six marketable squid species that occur in the SEA 7 Area. These belong to the long-fin (loliginid) and short-fin (Ommastrephid) squids the two most important exploited families of decpods. In the SEA 7 Area, only one species, Loligo forbesi is commercially exploited on a regular basis, although there are significant landings of other species on occasion. The closely related Loligo vulgaris sometimes appears in catches and the small Alloteuthis subulata is thought to be naturally abundant and an important food item in the marine ecosystem.

There are other important species represented in the SEA 7 Area. These include cuttlefish, octopods, sepiolids and a number of deep-water species. Most of these are marketable and may be ecologically important. Large fisheries for some of these species, particularly octopods and cuttlefish operate in European waters further south, but they are not currently exploited in the SEA 7 Area.
dataset
Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) data portal - The Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) data portal provides free access to available data and reports which have been produced through the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change SEA process. The site is run and managed by BGS on behalf of the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC). Many files can be downloaded directly from this website. Those that are too large to download can be ordered via the website for postal delivery from BGS.
British Geological Survey : BGS_SEA_103
English
Biota
Oceans
SeaDataNet Parameter Discovery Vocabulary: GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0:
Species distribution
SeaVoX Vertical Co-ordinate Coverages:
Free:
-24.00, 55.20, -5.00, 60.20
publication: 2006-05-10
2006-01-01 - 2006-01-01
British Geological Survey (BGS)
Paul Henni
Murchison House, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3LA, UK
tel: +44 (0)131 667 1000
email: offshoredata@bgs.ac.uk
Role: custodian
Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC)
Admiralty Way, London, SW1A 2HD, UK
tel: +44 0300 060 4000
email: enquiries@decc.gsi.gov.uk
Role: originator

Data Quality

This report was prepared by Lee C Hastie, Graham J Pierce and Jianjun Wang of the University of Aberdeen as part of the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change's Offshore Energy Strategic Environmental Assessment programme. Data on cephalopod landings from the ICES area are compiled by the ICES Working Group on Cephalopod Fisheries and Life History. The SEA 7 Area corresponds approximately to ICES Divisions Via, and Vib, which are fished by Scottish, other UK, Irish, French and Spanish fleets. Data for these fleets are collected separately and compiled by the respective national fisheries laboratories. General patterns in landings for ICES Divisions Via and Vib can be inferred from data presented in the WGCEPH report 2005 (Anon., 2005).
Minimal Distance: 5 http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/ISO_19139_Schemas/resources/uom/gmxUom.xml#m

Constraints

Metadata about metadata

aba64100-c15b-4de3-e044-0003ba6f30bd
British Geological Survey (BGS)
Mary Mowat
tel: +44 (0)131 667 1000
email: offshoredata@bgs.ac.uk
Role: point of contact
2011-08-30

Coupled Resource