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Survey report (Part 1) from the joint Norwegian/Russian Ecosystem Survey in the Barents Sea and the adjacent waters August-October 2023

Survey report (Part 1) from the joint Norwegian/Russian Ecosystem Survey in the Barents Sea and the adjacent waters August-October 2023
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Genome sequencing paves the way for more sustainable herring fishery

 E-Mail An international team of Swedish, Norwegian, Danish and Irish scientists has used whole genome sequencing to characterise 53 herring populations from the Atlantic Ocean and the Baltic Sea. They have developed genetic markers that make it possible to better monitor herring populations and avoid overfishing. The study is published in the journal eLife. This project provides a toolbox in the form of genetic markers for cost-effective screenings that can be applied to monitor herring stocks throughout their life history from the larval stage to the adult stage, concludes Professor Arild Folkvord of Bergen University, who led the GENSINC project, which this study is part of. It will now be possible to distinguish different stocks when they are mixed on the feeding grounds, for instance, which will help set fishing quotas that harness sustainable exploitation of genetically defined stocks.

Genome sequencing for more sustainable herring fishery

Date Time Genome sequencing for more sustainable herring fishery It has been estimated that the total breeding stock of herring in the Atlantic Ocean and adjacent waters amounts to about one trillion fish. Photograph: Many herrings An international team of Swedish, Norwegian, Danish and Irish scientists has used whole genome sequencing to characterise 53 herring populations from the Atlantic Ocean and the Baltic Sea. They have developed genetic markers that make it possible to better monitor herring populations and avoid overfishing. The study is published in the journal eLife. “This project provides a ‘toolbox’ in the form of genetic markers for cost-effective screenings that can be applied to monitor herring stocks throughout their life history from the larval stage to the adult stage,” concludes Professor Arild Folkvord of Bergen University, who led the GENSINC project, which this study is part of. “It will now be possible to distinguish different stocks when they a

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