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Thursday 5 June 2014

Sundown landing for the Ajax in Newlyn


Lonely crabber Intuition nestles between members of the beam trawler fleet...



as the netter Ajax makes her way in through the gaps...



past the ever increasing number of Under 10m inshore trawlers and scallopers...



currently filling the harbour...



some of these purpose built boats...



even include a conveyor system like their big sisters in the fleet...



all three of the Falmouth fleet...



back on the Ajax it's a long way down from atop the shelterdeck...



to where it's all smiles beaming up below in the fishroom where the boxes of #hake are being hooked up ready for landing...




the mighty hand of skipper Alan makes light work of lifting six boxes at a time.

Wednesday 4 June 2014

"Marketing the Local Catch": Stockholm, Sweden - 3-5 June 2013


The 8th FARNET seminar took place from 3-5 of June 2013 in Stockholm, Sweden, introducing the FARNET.lab format to explore with FLAGs different possibilities for “Marketing the Local Catch”. Hosted by DG MARE of the European Commission, the Stockholm FLAG and Stockholm County Board, and supported by the Swedish Ministry of Rural Affairs, the seminar brought together more than 80 FLAGs coming from 20 different countries to explore how various marketing initiatives could be developed and promoted through Axis 4 of the EFF. Through five lab themes, including “direct sales”, “digital marketplaces”, “short chains and Community Supported Fishery”, “branding and labelling”, and tapping into the "experience" aspects of local seafood products, participants analysed the pros and cons of projects and ideas, received feedback and advice from other FLAGs and experts from different, and sometimes distant, shores.

Participants of each lab produced a “Toolbox”, which will feed into further FARNET work, notably a follow up publication dedicated to the theme of “Marketing the Local Catch”. FARNET would like to thank all the participants, DG MARE and the Swedish partners for their involvement in making this 8th FARNET event a success.

The seminar report, presentations and participants list will be progressively available below and through our various communication platforms.












Noel Coward's Private Lives braves elemental weather at the Minack




In true Noel Coward style the evening audience were entertained before and during the performance with a range Noel Coward songs befitting this production of Private Lives...







at the Minack, though the weather gods were obviously not smiling on the cast, stage or audience as the evening closed in and low cloud turned to a light drizzle...




then something a little more heavy...









to the strains of "Why must the show go on?" as the hardy actors braved out the deluge




BBC Breakfast talks to Peter Bruce on the Budding Rose in Peterhead



"Fish stocks in the North Sea are healthy today" - Peter Bruce, skipper of the white fish trawler Budding Rose.

Peterhead fish market on BBC Breakfast

Peterhead fish market on BBC Breakfast

Tuesday 3 June 2014

Gannets spot easy pickings from 11km away

The impact of trawlers and their waste on seabird populations appear to be much larger than previously thought. A study by the University of Exeter highlights that the ‘footprint’ of a trawler is as large as 11km radius. This footprint influences the foraging behaviour of seabirds as they now associate trawlers with easy-pickings.



Using GPS the marine researchers from Exeter discovered that the northern gannet changed their behaviour in the presence of large boats and particularly trawlers.

Scientists at the Centre for Ecology and Conservation at the University of Exeter’s Penryn Campus in Cornwall and the Coastal & Marine Centre at University College Cork analysed GPS tracking data from 74 gannets from six breeding colonies around Ireland, and combined these with similar GPS tracking data from fishing vessels.

Using these GPS tracks the scientists were able to put a distance on the influence of the trawlers. Incredibly gannets from as far away as 11 km were attracted to the trawlers. Large seabirds such as gannets are known to feed on fish discards from trawlers as they was eating fish that live at depths far below the depths that the birds can dive to.




Dr Thomas Bodey of the University of Exeter, who led the study, said: “Our work suggests each fishing vessel has a substantial footprint, with the behaviour of seabirds affected within a 22km diameter circle surrounding it, much larger than we expected.”



Not only do the gannets travel distances to find the trawlers the birds are also able to determine if the journey is worthwhile. By looking closely at the way that birds and boats interacted the scientists concluded that the birds could tell whether the trawler was actively fishing and could even adjust their behaviour based on what type of fishing gear the trawler was using at the time.

Dr Mark Jessopp of the Coastal & Marine Centre at University College Cork, a co-author of the work, added: “The fact that birds responded differently to boats depending on whether they were fishing or not, and the type of gear they were carrying, indicates just how finely attuned these animals are to the opportunities humans can provide“.

Co-author Professor Stuart Bearhop, also of the University of Exeter’s Centre for Ecology and Conservation, said: “We know that seabirds are facing many impacts within the marine environment, and we have tended to think that interactions with fishing boats were a localised phenomenon. Our work indicates that the scale of impact on these top predator’s behaviour is much broader.”

Gannets are the UK’s largest seabird, foraging up to 500 km from their colonies. They forage almost exclusively during daylight hours, with birds resting on the sea surface at night. They are visual foragers with no external nostrils and relatively small olfactory bulbs.

All fishing boats greater than 15 m in length must carry a GPS transmitter as part of the European Union Vessel Monitoring System.

Full story courtesy of WildLife News

Paper reference:  Current Biology: Seabird movement reveals the ecological footprint of fishing vessels