Done Deal Lads
That reply is the stock reply being sent out since mid-summer.
There has been nothing decided yet.
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Done Deal Lads
Jim from Cork wrote:Done Deal Lads
That reply is the stock reply being sent out since mid-summer.
There has been nothing decided yet.
There is no plan as far as i am aware. The issue has been discussed between DAFF and industry on request from industry. The feeling of industry is that as non irish vessels fish for bass in the english channel and western approaches and southern celtic sea why cant irish vessels retain bass when they are fishing in these waters. The implications, for the abundance of bass on the irish coast, of the existing non irish fishery for bass in these areas and any inclusion of irish vessels in the bass fishery in these areas depends on the stock structure which will be determined by adult migration and dispersal of eggs and larvae. There is i think no definitive finding on what the stock structure is but that is the information that should inform the technical advice.
captain AHAB wrote:done deal lads
Given the overall economic situation and the challenges facing fishermen generally, I am anxious to pursue any proposal that would create additional commercial fishing opportunities for the Irish fleet.
"Given the overall economic situation and the challenges facing fishermen generally, I am anxious to pursue any proposal that would create additional commercial fishing opportunities for the Irish fleet".
"It is important to remember that the Irish vessels are precluded from fishing for bass in our waters"
It is important to remember that the Irish vessels are precluded from fishing for Bass in our waters
Whilst 88% of the recaptures of bass tagged inshore were taken by UK fisheries inside the UK 12-mile zone and 3 % were reported from the offshore pair-trawl fishery, 59% of the recaptures of bass tagged in the offshore pair-trawl fishery were made inshore along the UK coast, and 32% in the offshore pair trawl fishery. Most of the remaining 9% of recaptures were taken by UK vessels fishing outside 12 miles. Taking into account the likelihood of a tagged bass being available to be recaptured and reported (4-5 times more likely for bass tagged inshore, chiefly because they survive better than even selected pair-trawl caught fish) and the numbers of bass caught in the respective fisheries, an average of 40 fish tagged inshore were recaptured each year from the UK inshore fishery, and 5 fish from the offshore fishery. This indicates that for every 9 bass that could potentially be caught in the inshore fishery around England and Wales in the period 2000 - 2004, one would be available to be caught by another country's vessel (fishing outside 6 miles). This suggests that the effects of management measures implemented in the UK inshore fishery are largely restricted to that fishery.