Direct and indirect effects of minke whale abundance on cod and herring fisheries: A scenario experiment for the Greater Barents Sea

  • Tore Schweder
  • Gro Synøve Hagen
  • Einar Hatlebakk

Publikasjonsdetaljer

  • Journal: NAMMCO scientific publications, vol. 2, p. 120–133, 2000
  • Internasjonale standardnumre:
    • Trykt: 1560-2206
    • Elektronisk: 2309-2491

To study the pattern of interaction between minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) abundance and the main fisheries in the Greater Barents Sea, a simulation experiment was carried out. The population model involves 4 species interconnected in a food web: cod (Gadus morhua), capelin (Mallotus villosus), herring (Clupea harengus) and minke whales. Minke whales are preying on cod, capelin and herring; cod are preying on (young) cod, capelin and herring; herring in the Barents Sea are preying on capelin; while capelin is a bottom prey in the model. The consumption function for minke whales is estimated from stomach content data and prey abundance data. The model is dynamic. Minke whale abundances are kept on fixed levels, while recruitment in fish is stochastic. For cod catches, both the direct effect of whales consuming cod, and the indirect effect due to whales competing with cod for food and otherwise altering the ecosystem, are linear and of equal importance. The net effect on the herring fishery is of the same magnitude as the net effect on the cod fishery, with each extra whale reducing the catches of both species by some 5 tonnes.