FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI Recreational sea fishing in Europe in a global context-Participation rates, fishing effort, expenditure, and implications for monitoring and assessment BT AF HYDER, Kieran WELTERSBACH, Marc Simon ARMSTRONG, Mike FERTER, Keno TOWNHILL, Bryony AHVONEN, Anssi ARLINGHAUS, Robert BAIKOV, Andrei BELLANGER, Manuel BIRZAKS, Janis BORCH, Trude CAMBIE, Giulia DE GRAAF, Martin DIOGO, Hugo M. C. DZIEMIAN, Lukasz GORDOA, Ana GRZEBIELEC, Ryszard HARTILL, Bruce KAGERVALL, Anders KAPIRIS, Kostas KARLSSON, Martin KLEIVEN, Alf Ring LEJK, Adam M. LEVREL, Harold LOVELL, Sabrina LYLE, Jeremy MOILANEN, Pentti MONKMAN, Graham MORALES-NIN, Beatriz MUGERZA, Estanis MARTINEZ, Roi O'REILLY, Paul OLESEN, Hans Jakob PAPADOPOULOS, Anastasios PITA, Pablo RADFORD, Zachary RADTKE, Krzysztof ROCHE, William ROCKLIN, Delphine RUIZ, Jon SCOUGAL, Callum SILVESTRI, Roberto SKOV, Christian STEINBACK, Scott SUNDELOF, Andreas SVAGZDYS, Arvydas TURNBULL, David VAN DER HAMMEN, Tessa VAN VOORHEES, David VAN WINSEN, Frankwin VERLEYE, Thomas VEIGA, Pedro VOLSTAD, Jon-Helge ZARAUZ, Lucia ZOLUBAS, Tomas STREHLOW, Harry V. AS 1:1;2:2;3:1;4:3;5:1;6:4;7:5,6;8:7;9:8;10:9;11:10;12:1,11;13:12;14:13;15:14;16:15;17:14;18:16;19:17;20:18;21:19;22:20;23:14;24:21,22;25:;26:23;27:4;28:11;29:24;30:25;31:1;32:26;33:27;34:28;35:29;36:1;37:14;38:26;39:30;40:25;41:1;42:31;43:32;44:33;45:34;46:35;47:36;48:12;49:22;50:37;51:38;52:39;53:3;54:;55:35;56:2; FF 1:;2:;3:;4:;5:;6:;7:;8:;9:PDG-RBE-EM;10:;11:;12:;13:;14:;15:;16:;17:;18:;19:;20:;21:;22:;23:;24:;25:;26:;27:;28:;29:;30:;31:;32:;33:;34:;35:;36:;37:;38:;39:;40:;41:;42:;43:;44:;45:;46:;47:;48:;49:;50:;51:;52:;53:;54:;55:;56:; C1 Ctr Environm Fisheries & Aquaculture Sci, Lowestoft, Suffolk, England. Thunen Inst Balt Sea Fisheries, Rostock, Germany. Inst Marine Res, Bergen, Norway. Nat Resources Inst Finland Luke, Helsinki, Finland. Leibniz Inst Freshwater Ecol & Inland Fisheries, Dept Biol & Ecol Fishes, Berlin, Germany. Humboldt Univ, Albrecht Daniel Thaer Inst Agr & Hort, Fac Life Sci, Div Integrat Fisheries Management, Berlin, Germany. Minist Environm, Fisheries Resources Dept, Tallinn, Estonia. Ifremer, UMR AMURE, Unite Econ Maritime, Plouzane, France. Inst Food Safety Anim Hlth & Environm, Riga, Latvia. Akvaplan Niva AS, Fram Ctr, Tromso, Norway. Bangor Univ, Sch Ocean Sci, Menai Bridge, Anglesey, Wales. Wageningen Marine Res, Ijmuiden, Netherlands. Univ Acores, Dept Oceanog & Pescas, Marine & Environm Sci Ctr, Horta, Acores, Portugal. NMFRI, Gdynia, Poland. CEAB CSIC, Dept Marine Ecol, Blanes, Spain. NIWA, Auckland, New Zealand. Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Inst Freshwater Res, Drottningholm, Sweden. Inst Marine Biol Resources & Inland Waters, Hellen Ctr Marine Res, Anavissos, Greece. Inst Coastal Res, Dept Aquat Resources, Oregrund, Sweden. Flodevigen Marine Res Stn, Inst Marine Res, Hls, Norway. UMR CIRED, Paris, France. NOAA Fisheries, Silver Spring, MD USA. Univ Tasmania, Inst Marine & Antarctic Studies, Hobart, Tas, Australia. CSIC UIB, Mediterranean Inst Adv Studies, Mallorca, Iles Balears, Spain. AZTI Tecnalia, Sukarrieta, Bizkaia, Spain. Inland Fisheries Ireland, Dublin, Ireland. Tech Univ Denmark, Natl Inst Aquat Resources DTU Aqua, Lyngby, Denmark. Fisheries Res Inst, Nea Peramos, Greece. Univ Santiago de Compostela, Fac Econ & Business Adm, Dept Appl Econ, Santiago De Compostela, Spain. Mem Univ Newfoundland, Dept Geog, St John, NF, Canada. Ctr Interuniv Biol Marina Ecol Applicata, CIBM, Livorno, Italy. Tech Univ Denmark, Sect Inland Fisheries & Ecol, DTU AQUA, Silkeborg, Denmark. NOAA Fisheries, Woods Hole, MA USA. Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Inst Marine Res, Lysekil, Sweden. Minist Agr, Fisheries Serv, Klaipeda, Lithuania. Scottish Govt, Marine Scotland, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland. Inst Agr & Fisheries Res ILVO, Oostende, Belgium. Flanders Marine Inst, Vlaams Inst Zee VLIZ, Oostende, Belgium. Univ Algarve, Ctr Marine Sci CCMAR, FCT 7, Faro, Portugal. C2 CEFAS, UK THUNEN INST BALT SEA FISHERIES, GERMANY IMR, NORWAY NAT RESOURCES INST FINLAND LUKE, FINLAND IGB, GERMANY UNIV HUMBOLDT, GERMANY MINIST ENVIRONM, ESTONIA IFREMER, FRANCE BIOR, LATVIA AKVAPLAN NIVA AS, NORWAY UNIV BANGOR, UK WAGENINGEN MARINE RES, NETHERLANDS UNIV ACORES, PORTUGAL NMFRI, POLAND CEAB CSIC, SPAIN NIWA, NEW ZEALAND UNIV UPSALLA SLU, SWEDEN HELLENIC CTR MARINE RES, GREECE SLU, SWEDEN IMR, NORWAY CIRED, FRANCE NOAA, USA UNIV TASMANIA, AUSTRALIA CSIC, SPAIN AZTI, SPAIN IFI, IRELAND UNIV TECH DENMARK (DTU AQUA), DENMARK FRI, GREECE UNIV SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA, SPAIN UNIV MEM NEWFOUNDLAND, CANADA CIBM, ITALY UNIV TECH DENMARK, DENMARK NOAA, USA UNIV UPSALLA SLU, SWEDEN MINIST AGR, LITHUANIA SCOTTISH GOVT, UK ILVO, BELGIUM FLANDERS MARINE INST, BELGIUM UNIV ALGARVE, PORTUGAL SI BREST SE PDG-RBE-EM UM AMURE IN WOS Ifremer jusqu'en 2018 copubli-france copubli-europe copubli-int-hors-europe IF 6.655 TC 173 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00410/52136/52846.pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00410/52136/52847.pdf LA English DT Article DE ;European marine recreational fisheries;fisheries assessment and management;fishing effort and expenditure;participation;surveys and monitoring of marine recreational fisheries AB Marine recreational fishing (MRF) is a high-participation activity with large economic value and social benefits globally, and it impacts on some fish stocks. Although reporting MRF catches is a European Union legislative requirement, estimates are only available for some countries. Here, data on numbers of fishers, participation rates, days fished, expenditures, and catches of two widely targeted species were synthesized to provide European estimates of MRF and placed in the global context. Uncertainty assessment was not possible due to incomplete knowledge of error distributions; instead, a semi-quantitative bias assessment was made. There were an estimated 8.7 million European recreational sea fishers corresponding to a participation rate of 1.6%. An estimated 77.6 million days were fished, and expenditure was €5.9 billion annually. There were higher participation, numbers of fishers, days fished and expenditure in the Atlantic than the Mediterranean, but the Mediterranean estimates were generally less robust. Comparisons with other regions showed that European MRF participation rates and expenditure were in the mid-range, with higher participation in Oceania and the United States, higher expenditure in the United States, and lower participation and expenditure in South America and Africa. For both northern European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax, Moronidae) and western Baltic cod (Gadus morhua, Gadidae) stocks, MRF represented 27% of the total removals. This study highlights the importance of MRF and the need for bespoke, regular and statistically sound data collection to underpin European fisheries management. Solutions are proposed for future MRF data collection in Europe and other regions to support sustainable fisheries management. PY 2018 PD MAR SO Fish And Fisheries SN 1467-2960 PU Wiley VL 19 IS 2 UT 000426503000003 BP 225 EP 243 DI 10.1111/faf.12251 ID 52136 ER EF