4.4 Article

Northern cod comeback

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES
Volume 72, Issue 12, Pages 1789-1798

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cjfas-2015-0346

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Fisheries Products International
  2. DFO
  3. NSERC
  4. Newfoundland Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture (DFA)
  5. Labrador Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture (DFA)
  6. DFA
  7. Research and Development Corporation of Newfoundland

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The great northern cod (Gadus morhua) stock, formerly among the world's largest and the icon for depletion and supposed nonrecovery of marine fishes, is making a major comeback after nearly two decades of attrition and fishery moratorium. Using acoustic-trawl surveys of the main prespawning and spawning components of the stock, we show that biomass has increased from tens of thousands of tonnes to >200 thousand tonnes within the last decade. The increase was signalled by massive schooling behaviour in late winter first observed in 2008 in the southern range of the stock (Bonavista Corridor) after an absence for 15 years, perhaps spurred by immigration. Increases in size composition and fish condition and apparent declines in mortality followed, leading to growth rates approaching 30% per annum. In the spring of 2015, large increases in cod abundance and size composition were observed for the first time since the moratorium in the more northerly spawning groups of this stock complex. The cod rebound has paralleled increases in the abundance of capelin (Mallotus villosus), whose abundance declined rapidly in the cold early 1990s but has recently increased during a period of warm ocean temperatures. With continued growth in the capelin stock and frugal management (low fishing mortality), this stock could rebuild, perhaps within less than a decade, to historical levels of sustainable yield. More generally, if this stock can recover, the potential exists for recovery of many other depleted stocks worldwide.

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