Dear colleagues,

I would like to call your attention to this special theme session on "Top 
predators, food webs, and ecosystem-based fisheries management" at the next 
ICES Annual Science Conference (ASC), 7 – 10 September 2020, Copenhagen, 
Denmark.


This session is especially meant to share research on top predators including 
marine mammals, seabirds, turtles and large fish and provides a great 
opportunity to dive deep into the food web.

Please consider submitting an abstract, via the ASC home page.

http://ices.dk/news-and-events/asc/ASC2020/Pages/default.aspx
Abstracts should be submitted by the deadline of 11 March 2020.

More information on the session below.


Best regards,

Anita Gilles, anita.gil...@tiho-hannover.de

(co-chair ICES Working Group on Marine Mammal Ecology)

Theme session A
Top predators, food webs, and ecosystem-based fisheries management
 convened by Christopher Lynam, Anita Gilles and Ian Mitchell.

In ecosystem-based fisheries management, non-target stocks, habitats, and 
predators that are in part dependent on commercially exploited stocks must be 
taken into account. Currently, fish stock advice focuses on Total Allowable 
Catch and does not explicitly take into account prey levels available to 
piscivorous sharks, marine mammals, or seabirds. Similarly, conservation 
efforts tend to focus on key habitats and species of concern with less 
attention paid to the prey species that support them.
Ecosystem-based management is the framework that allows these related aims to 
be considered jointly. When fully implemented, ecosystem-based management shall 
support efforts to restore and maintain biodiversity and simultaneously provide 
productive sustainable fisheries in support of the UN Sustainable Development 
Goals<https://www.unenvironment.org/news-and-stories/story/supporting-shift-more-sustainable-fishing>
 and regional frameworks such as the EU Marine Strategy Framework 
Directive<https://ec.europa.eu/environment/marine/eu-coast-and-marine-policy/marine-strategy-framework-directive/index_en.htm>.
This theme session provides an opportunity to discuss key issues of importance 
to conservation and fisheries management, to review methods and to demonstrate 
a way forward to ecosystem advice and ecosystem-based management.
Abstracts are welcome on the following topics:

  *   Foodweb modelling to identify consumption requirements of top predators 
along with the production of fish prey (e.g. multispecies functional response 
and dynamic energy budget models)
  *   Spatio-temporal empirical studies to identify overlap between predators 
and prey
  *   Evidence of indirect interactions between fisheries and top predators: 
specifically, competition for food sources or fisheries losses 
(discard/slippage/offal discharge) as a food source
  *   Assessment approaches that can deliver ecosystem advice including but not 
limited to the extension of multi-species fisheries models to include top 
predators, Bayesian network analyses and risk-based models
  *   Management options that enable productive fisheries and support 
conservation aims, including spatial and temporal management of fishing fleets 
through protected areas, seasonal closures, catch restraints and effort limits



   -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Dr. Anita Gilles
    University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Foundation
    Institute for Terrestrial and Aquatic Wildlife Research (ITAW)
    Werftstr. 6 | 25761 Büsum
    Germany
    Phone: +49 (0)511-8568177
    Fax: +49 (0)511-8568181
    anita.gil...@tiho-hannover.de
    http://www.tiho-hannover.de/index.php?id=5380
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