From a review of recent developments in the harvesting and processing of krill, an analysis is made of the market potential for the main products of a krill fishery, namely whole krill, tail meats, mince (particularly surimi) and meal. A techno-economic analysis of various catching - processing - product systems is made, in terms of costs and prices applicable in Western countries in 1977. The study finds that in practice the rapid spoilage rate of- krill after capture effectively determines that it should be processed on board freezer or factory trawlers. However, unless krill is marketed essentially as a crustacean product (even though in minced form) it is most unlikely to generate sufficient revenue to justify the high costs of its e...
The fishery for Antarctic krill has been stable for a decade with approximately 100 000 tonnes being...
In June 2014, the ICED programme, the British Antarctic Survey and WWF co-hosted a two day workshop ...
A revised precautionary catch limit for Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) in the Scotia Sea of 4 m...
Krill Harvesting has been a fisheries industry since the 1970s and was at its height in the early 1...
There has been increasing concern amongst the scientific community and those responsible for the man...
This study pertains to the problem of international activity in an area of political and ecological ...
This paper explains the management of the Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) fishery in the Atlanti...
There are currently at least six commercial fisheries harvesting six different species of euphausiid...
-Small scaled Russian exploratory fishing for krill in the Southern Ocean began in the late 1960s. ...
Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) are the most abundant pelagic Antarctic crustacean. This large a...
This publication and the scientific position of R.D. was supported by a grant awarded to B.M. from t...
Antarctica’s Southern Ocean hosts a large range of important species that have been the subject of m...
The Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) has a mandate to m...
The fishery for Antarctic krill has been stable for a decade with approximately 100 000 tonnes being...
In June 2014, the ICED programme, the British Antarctic Survey and WWF co-hosted a two day workshop ...
A revised precautionary catch limit for Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) in the Scotia Sea of 4 m...
Krill Harvesting has been a fisheries industry since the 1970s and was at its height in the early 1...
There has been increasing concern amongst the scientific community and those responsible for the man...
This study pertains to the problem of international activity in an area of political and ecological ...
This paper explains the management of the Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) fishery in the Atlanti...
There are currently at least six commercial fisheries harvesting six different species of euphausiid...
-Small scaled Russian exploratory fishing for krill in the Southern Ocean began in the late 1960s. ...
Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) are the most abundant pelagic Antarctic crustacean. This large a...
This publication and the scientific position of R.D. was supported by a grant awarded to B.M. from t...
Antarctica’s Southern Ocean hosts a large range of important species that have been the subject of m...
The Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) has a mandate to m...
The fishery for Antarctic krill has been stable for a decade with approximately 100 000 tonnes being...
In June 2014, the ICED programme, the British Antarctic Survey and WWF co-hosted a two day workshop ...
A revised precautionary catch limit for Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) in the Scotia Sea of 4 m...