With slow growth rates, late maturity and a high maximum age of 100 years or more, orange roughy can be classified as a vulnerable deepwater fish species that can only sustain low rates of exploitation. Historical patterns of exploitation associated with this species suggest that it is currently not possible to manage its fisheries in the Northeast Atlantic sustainably, and the total allowable catch for orange roughy has been gradually reduced to zero for European fisheries since 2010. Orange roughy to the west of Ireland and Britain occurs on distinct bathymetric features (seamounts, hills and canyons) as well as on flat ground along the continental slope. Productivity-susceptibility analysis (PSA) was performed to evaluate the biological ...
The orange roughy, Hoplostethus atlanticus, has been one of the main targeted species in deep-sea fi...
Since the 1970s the deepwater shelf edge habitat west of the British Isles has been targeted by comm...
The ICES working group on biology and assessment of deep-sea fisheries resources (WGDEEP) provides s...
With slow growth rates, late maturity and a high maximum age of 100 years or more, orange roughy can...
With slow growth rates, late maturity and a high maximum age of 100 years or more, orange roughy can...
Assessing the risk of vulnerable species exposure to deepwater trawl fisheries: the case of orange r...
Who do you trust when trying to make an informed and environmentally friendly choice on fish fillets...
We review information from scientific trawl surveys carried out between 1977 and 2002 in the Porcupi...
Data on fish species sensitivity to fishing combining vulnerability from Cheung et al 2007 supplemen...
Reducing the impact on vulnerable species through changes in fishing practices, such as the spatial ...
13 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables, supplementary material https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/f...
An Irish commercial fishery for orange roughy began in the Northeast Atlantic in 2001 with the assis...
Risks to deepwater chondrichthyans (sharks, rays, and chimaeras) from fishing are poorly understood,...
65m RV Celtic Explorer. The main focus of this pilot survey was to acoustically survey orange roughy...
The original publication published by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in...
The orange roughy, Hoplostethus atlanticus, has been one of the main targeted species in deep-sea fi...
Since the 1970s the deepwater shelf edge habitat west of the British Isles has been targeted by comm...
The ICES working group on biology and assessment of deep-sea fisheries resources (WGDEEP) provides s...
With slow growth rates, late maturity and a high maximum age of 100 years or more, orange roughy can...
With slow growth rates, late maturity and a high maximum age of 100 years or more, orange roughy can...
Assessing the risk of vulnerable species exposure to deepwater trawl fisheries: the case of orange r...
Who do you trust when trying to make an informed and environmentally friendly choice on fish fillets...
We review information from scientific trawl surveys carried out between 1977 and 2002 in the Porcupi...
Data on fish species sensitivity to fishing combining vulnerability from Cheung et al 2007 supplemen...
Reducing the impact on vulnerable species through changes in fishing practices, such as the spatial ...
13 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables, supplementary material https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/f...
An Irish commercial fishery for orange roughy began in the Northeast Atlantic in 2001 with the assis...
Risks to deepwater chondrichthyans (sharks, rays, and chimaeras) from fishing are poorly understood,...
65m RV Celtic Explorer. The main focus of this pilot survey was to acoustically survey orange roughy...
The original publication published by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in...
The orange roughy, Hoplostethus atlanticus, has been one of the main targeted species in deep-sea fi...
Since the 1970s the deepwater shelf edge habitat west of the British Isles has been targeted by comm...
The ICES working group on biology and assessment of deep-sea fisheries resources (WGDEEP) provides s...