The 'Atlantic cod', ''Gadus morhua'', is a well-known
food fish belonging to the family
Gadidae. It grows to two metres (6 1/2 feet) in length. Sexual maturity is attained between ages 2 to 4. Coloring is brown to green on the
dorsal side, shading to silver ventrally. Its
habitat ranges from the shoreline down to the
continental shelf.
In the western
Atlantic Ocean cod has a distribution north of
Cape Hatteras,
North Carolina, and round both coasts of
Greenland; in the eastern Atlantic it is found from the
Bay of Biscay north to the
Arctic Ocean, including the
North Sea, areas around
Iceland and the
Barents Sea, which is the most important feeding area.
Distribution
Northeast Atlantic cod

Estimated biomasses of North-East Arctic Cod 1946-2004 in mill. tonnes. The estimation are performed by the Arctic Fisheries Working Group of
ICES, published in the ICES Report AFWG 2005, ACFM:20. Estimation method: Standard
VPA.
The 'Northeast Atlantic', or rather 'North-East Arctic Cod', as it is labelled by the
ICES, is at present the world's largest population of Atlantic cod distributed in the
Barents Sea area. The stock has also been refereed to as the 'Arcto-Norwegian' cod stock. This stock is sometimes referred to as 'skrei', a Norwegian name meaning something like "the wanderer", distinguishing it from non-migrating coastal cod... This stock spawns in March and April along the Norwegian coast, about 40% around the
Lofoten archipelago. Newly hatched larvae drift northwards with the coastal current while feeding on larval
copepods. By summer the young cod reach the Barents Sea where they stay for the rest of their life, until their spawning migration. As the cod grow, they feed on
krill and other small
crustaceans and fish. Adult cod primarily feed on fish such as
capelin and
herring. The northeast Arctic cod also shows
cannibalistic behaviour. Estimated stock size was in 2004 1.6 million tonnes.
The 'North Sea cod stock' is primarily fished by
European Union member states and Norway. In 1999 the catch was divided among Denmark (31%), Scotland (25%), the rest of the
United Kingdom (12%), the
Netherlands (10%),
Belgium,
Germany and
Norway (17%). In the 1970s, the annual catch rose to between 200,000 - 300,000 tons. Due to concerns about overfishing, catch quotas were repeatedly reduced in the 1980s and 1990s. In 2003,
ICES stated that there is a high risk of stock collapse if current exploitation levels continue, and recommended a moratorium on catching Atlantic cod in the
North Sea during 2004. However, agriculture and fisheries ministers from the
Council of the European Union endorsed the EU/Norway Agreement and set the total allowable catch (TAC) 27,300 tons.

Atlantic cod catch 1950-2002. Northeast Atlantic (blue), northwest Atlantic (green) and total (red)
Population state and development
The spawning stock of cod was more than a million tons following
World War II, but declined to a historic minimum of 118,000 tons in 1987. The catch reached a historic maximum of 1,343,000 tons in 1956, and bottomed out at 212,000 tons in 1990. Since 2000, the spawning stock has increased quite quickly, helped by low fishing pressure. However, there are worries about a decreased age at first spawning (often an early sign of stock collapse), combined with the level of discards and unreported catches. The total catch in 2003 was 521,949 tons, the major fishers being
Norway (191,976 tons) and
Russia (182,160 tons).
Northwest Atlantic cod
The 'northwest Atlantic cod' has been regarded as heavily overfished throughout its range, resulting in a crash in the
fishery in the
United States and
Canada during the early 1990s.
Newfoundland's northern cod fishery can be traced back to the 16th century. "On average, about 300,000 tonnes of cod was landed annually until the 1960s, when advances in technology enabled factory trawlers, many of them foreign, to take larger catches. By 1968, landings for the fish peaked at 800,000 tonnes before a gradual decline set in. With the reopening of the limited cod fisheries last year, nearly 2,700 tonnes of cod were hauled in. Today, it's estimated that offshore cod stocks are at one per cent of what they were in 1977"
[1].
The fishery has yet to recover, and may not recover at all because of a possibly stable change in the
food chain. Atlantic cod was a top-tier predator, along with
haddock,
flounder and
hake, feeding upon smaller prey such as
herring,
capelin,
shrimp and
snow crab. With the large predatory fish removed, their prey has had a population explosion and have become the top predators.
Alternative explanations and solutions
Debbie MacKenzie has presented an alternative explanation of the collapse of the cod stocks of the Grand Banks and beyond
[2]. According to MacKenzie, sustained massive overfishing by drag-trawlers has depleted the nutrient cycle of a closed ecosystem (surface plankton, schools of fish, bottom-feeders and dwellers). The depletion of biomass leaves the ocean starving, and lack of growth leaves unfixed carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The ocean of evidence is in surface plankton depletion at the base of the food chain, a dearth of filter-feeders in favour of seaweed fed on nitrogen-loaded water, to the loss of bottom-feeders, cod and pelagic fish which were at the top of the food chain. The solution is: i) to stop strip-mining the ocean floor with destructive dragnets, ii) to feed the remaining fish with food, not the suffocating waste from sewage and chemical fertilizer polluted estuaries that causes
pseudo-eutrophication, and most importantly iii) to enforce the regulation of commercial fishing very effectively. The economic alternative to strict regulation for the public interest is to continue the
Tragedy of the Commons - where all potential
resource rent is lost and
normal profit obtained - where cost is public and shared, but gain is private and individual until the resource itself is gone.
Population tracking
Cod populations or stocks can differ significantly both in appearance and biology. For instance, the cod stocks of the
Baltic Sea are adapted to low-salinity water. Organizations such as the Northwest Atlantic Fishery Organization (NAFO) and
ICES divide the cod into management units or stocks; however these units are not always biologically distinguishable stocks. Some major stocks/management units on the Canadian/US shelf are (see
map of NAFO areas) are the Southern Labrador-Eastern Newfoundland stock (NAFO divisions 2J3KL), the Northern Gulf of St. Lawrence stock (NAFO divisions 3Pn4RS), the Northern Scotian Shelf stock (NAFO divisions 4VsW), which all lie in Canadian waters, and the Georges Bank and
Gulf of Maine stocks in United States waters. In the European Atlantic, there are numerous separate stocks: on the shelves of Iceland, the coast of Norway, the Barents Sea, the Faroe Islands, off western Scotland, the North Sea, the Irish Sea, the
Celtic Sea and in the Baltic Sea.
See also
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Cod
★
Cod War
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Cod Trade
External links
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FishBase
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Codtrace
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The Centre for Environment Fisheries and Aquaculture Science
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Skrei - the miraculous cod
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The history of the northern cod fishery in Canada
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ICES recommendation for the North Sea Cod stock (2007)
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ICES recommendation for the North East Arctic Cod stock (2007)
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Reports on the status of Canadian fishing stocks, including cod
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Governmental Norwegian fact sheet on North-East Arctic Cod
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Explains the collapse of the cod stocks of the grand banks, at odds with DFO accounts