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The Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus) is a long, streamlined boney fish with medium sized head. They are generally 30 40 cm long. It is a pelagic, shoaling fish and is to be found on both sides of the North Atlantic. It lives from the surface and down to depths of 250 m. and at various salinities.
Herring can be found in the seas all around Iceland. it is caught by
herring- and capelin- seine and by pelagic trawl. The age of the catch
is often 4 7 years at weights of 200 300 g. The flesh of herring
shows great variation in fat content according to season.
The various subspecies of C. harengus can be distinguished apart by
appearance and morphology. There are two main stocks of herring in
Icelandic waters which differ in growth rate, size, time of spawning
and migration patterns;
· Icelandic summer spawning herring,
· Norwegian spring spawning herring (Atlanto-Scandian herring)
The Icelandic summer spawning herring lives in the coastal waters
around Iceland, and has been utilised since the mid 1970s after a
fishing ban for several years. The catch is seasonal, mostly taking
place in October to January off the east, south and west coasts of
Iceland. This stock spawns in July off the southwest and southeast
coasts of Iceland and then migrates in search of feeding grounds off
the west and east coasts. Catch quota for Icelandic herring has
increased steadily since 1975, amounting to around 100,000 tonnes per
year in recent years.
Of the 110,000 tonnes of Icelandic summer spawning herring which was
allocated for 2004/2005, about 107,000 tonnes were caught but only
about 25,000 tonnes of this has been processed into meal and oil. The
remainder was processed for human consumption. The quota for 2005/2006
remains unchanged at 110,000 tonnes.
The Norwegian spring spawning herring is found in the open seas of the
northeast Atlantic. This stock spawns in February to April off western
Norway and the immature fish stay in Norwegian waters while the adult
fish migrate in search of food further out into the northeast Atlantic.
Until the late 1960s shoals would approach the Icelandic coast in the
summer and often be caught in very large quantities by the Icelandic
fleet. The stock declined rapidly in the second half of the 60s due to
adverse environmental conditions and also overfishing of small herring
by the international fleet. Fishing was banned for almost 25 years
until in 1985 when the fishery was reopened in Norwegian waters with
very small quotas. The stock has now, however, recovered and
international agreements have maintained it in a sustainable condition.
This stock has been harvested by Norway, Russia, Faroe
Islands, the European Union and Iceland and total landings in 2004
amounted to 806.000 tonnes. Most of the fishing is in international
waters but also within Faroese waters and near Jan Mayen (Norway).
ICES have advised a TAC of 890,000 tonnes for 2005. The Icelandic
Minister of Fisheries has unilaterally allocated a quota of 157,700
tonnes to the Icelandic fleet.
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