Deep Sea Sharks - Longnose velvet dogfish (Centroselachus crepidater) - distribution of abundance across the survey area

This map layer has been supplied directly by Marine Scotland National Marine Plan interactive. You can obtain additional information about the layer on this page

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Data from a scientific deep-water trawl fisheries survey in the north-east Atlantic were analysed to determine the spatial and bathymetric distribution of elasmobranch species and assess the change in relative abundance over the period 1998–2013. During this period, commercial fisheries for deep-water sharks went from being entirely unregulated, to being brieflymanaged, to being completely prohibited. Out of the 11 more common species, five showed no change in relative abundance over time, two (Centrophorus squamosus and Centroselachus crepidater) declined significantly and four increased in relative abundance (Apristurus aphyodes, Apristurus microps, Galeus melastomus and Deania calcea).

This layer depicts the distribution of Longnose velvet dogfish (Centroselachus crepidater) across the survey area.

GIS Data Type: 
Web Service Information: 
Base WMS Address: http://msmap1.atkinsgeospatial.com/geoserver/ows/nmp?
Layer name:nmp:biota_deep_sea_sharks_longnose_velvet_dogfish_abundance
Does this layer display time aware features: 
No
Usage limitations: 
The following attribution statement must be used: Contains information from the Scottish Government (Marine Scotland) licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.