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Featured researches published by Thomas Brunel.


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2014

Ecosystem-based management objectives for the North Sea:Riding the forage fish rollercoaster

Mark Dickey-Collas; Georg H. Engelhard; Anna Rindorf; Kristina Raab; Sophie Smout; Geert Aarts; M. van Deurs; Thomas Brunel; Ayoe Hoff; R. A. M. Lauerburg; Stefan Garthe; K. Haste Andersen; Finlay Scott; T. van Kooten; Douglas J. Beare; Myron A. Peck

The North Sea provides a useful model for considering forage fish (FF) within ecosystem-based management as it has a complex assemblage of FF species. This paper is designed to encourage further debate and dialogue between stakeholders about management objectives. Changing the management of fisheries on FF will have economic consequences for all fleets in the North Sea. The predators that are vulnerable to the depletion of FF are Sandwich terns, great skua and common guillemots, and to a lesser extent, marine mammals. Comparative evaluations of management strategies are required to consider whether maintaining the reserves of prey biomass or a more integral approach of monitoring mortality rates across the trophic system is more robust under the ecosystem approach. In terms of trophic energy transfer, stability, and resilience of the ecosystem, FF should be considered as both a sized-based pool of biomass and as species components of the system by managers and modellers. Policy developers should not consider the knowledge base robust enough to embark on major projects of ecosystem engineering. Management plans appear able to maintain sustainable exploitation in the short term. Changes in the productivity of FF populations are inevitable so management should remain responsive and adaptive.


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2016

Achieving maximum sustainable yield in mixed fisheries: a management approach for the North Sea demersal fisheries

Clara Ulrich; Paul J. Dolder; Thomas Brunel; Ernesto Jardim; Steven J. Holmes; Alexander Kempf; Lars O. Mortensen; Jan Jaap Poos; Anna Rindorf

Achieving single species maximum sustainable yield (MSY) in complex and dynamic fisheries targeting multiple species (mixed fisheries) is challenging because achieving the objective for one species may mean missing the objective for another. The North Sea mixed fisheries are a representative example of an issue that is generic across most demersal fisheries worldwide, with the diversity of species and fisheries inducing numerous biological and technical interactions. Building on a rich knowledge base for the understanding and quantification of these interactions, new approaches have emerged. Recent paths towards operationalizing MSY at the regional scale have suggested the expansion of the concept into a desirable area of “pretty good yield”, implemented through a range around FMSY that would allow for more flexibility in management targets. This article investigates the potential of FMSY ranges to combine long-term single-stock targets with flexible, short-term, mixed-fisheries management requirements applied to the main North Sea demersal stocks. It is shown that sustained fishing at the upper bound of the range may lead to unacceptable risks when technical interactions occur. An objective method is suggested that provides an optimal set of fishing mortality within the range, minimizing the risk of total allowable catch mismatches among stocks captured within mixed fisheries, and addressing explicitly the trade-offs between the most and least productive stocks.


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2010

Lessons learned from stock collapse and recovery of North Sea herring: a review

Mark Dickey-Collas; Richard D.M. Nash; Thomas Brunel; Cindy J. G. van Damme; C. Tara Marshall; Mark Payne; Ad Corten; Audrey J. Geffen; Myron A. Peck; Emma M. C. Hatfield; Niels T. Hintzen; Katja Enberg; Laurence T. Kell


Fisheries Oceanography | 2007

Long-term trends in fish recruitment in the north-east Atlantic related to climate change

Thomas Brunel; Jean Boucher


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2014

Forage fish, their fisheries, and their predators: who drives whom?

Georg H. Engelhard; Myron A. Peck; Anna Rindorf; Sophie Smout; Mikael van Deurs; Kristina Raab; Ken Haste Andersen; Stefan Garthe; Rebecca A.M. Lauerburg; Finlay Scott; Thomas Brunel; Geert Aarts; Tobias van Kooten; Mark Dickey-Collas


Fisheries Research | 2010

Improved estimation of trawling tracks using cubic Hermite spline interpolation of position registration data

Niels T. Hintzen; G.J. Piet; Thomas Brunel


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2010

Age-structure-dependent recruitment: a meta-analysis applied to Northeast Atlantic fish stocks

Thomas Brunel


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2010

Effects of temperature and population density on von Bertalanffy growth parameters in Atlantic herring: a macro-ecological analysis

Thomas Brunel; Mark Dickey-Collas


Fisheries Oceanography | 2011

Does larval mortality influence population dynamics? An analysis of North Sea herring (Clupea harengus) time series

Sascha M. M. Fässler; Mark Payne; Thomas Brunel; Mark Dickey-Collas


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2013

Is age structure a relevant criterion for the health of fish stocks

Thomas Brunel; G.J. Piet

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Niels T. Hintzen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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G.J. Piet

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Anna Rindorf

Technical University of Denmark

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Cindy J. G. van Damme

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Dirk Burggraaf

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Kristina Raab

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Sascha M. M. Fässler

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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