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Haddock
U.S. Atlantic
Trawl

See Report in PDF


Credit/© OS/CFSAN and ORA

Best Choice Some Concerns Avoid

SPECIES

Haddock

SCIENTIFIC NAME Melanogrammus aeglefinus
MARKET NAMES

Haddock, Scrod

SUSHI NAMES  
DESCRIPTION

Haddock is a demersal (bottom-dwelling) species in the family Gadidae, which are known as the “true cods”. Like many other gadoids (cod, hake, pollock, whiting), it is a commercially important groundfish species. Haddock is distributed on both sides of the North Atlantic Ocean, and in the Northwest Atlantic ranges from Labrador to Cape Charles, Virginia. Haddock are usually found in 45 to 135m of water and in bottom temperatures between 2° and 10°C. Adult Haddock range in size from about 30cm to up to 1m, and most commercially caught Haddock weigh from 1 to 3kg. The maximum known age for Haddock is 14 years, but only a small proportion of animals survive past age 9. Haddock are highly fecund, and adult female egg production increases substantially with age, from a few hundred thousand eggs each year in the youngest spawners up to three million eggs in the oldest spawners. Haddock have a broad diet, which varies by locality. Among other things, they consume echinoderms (mainly brittle stars), crustaceans, polychaetes, bivalve and gastropod mollusks, and fishes (mostly herring eggs). Juveniles are preyed upon by several fish species including other gadoids while adult Haddock are preyed upon by Gray seals.

In Canada, there are several haddock stocks including one in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence and eastern Scotian Shelf, a major one on the eastern Scotian Shelf and Bay of Fundy, and a major transboundary stock on Georges Bank. Although some Haddock stocks undertake seasonal migrations within their areas, there is thought to be relatively little exchange of individuals among the different stocks.

 

Sustainability Profile
Concern
Low
Moderate
High
Critical
Inherent vulnerability
 x
Status of stocks
 x
Nature of by-catch
 x
Habitat effects
 x
Management effectiveness
 x
INHERENT VULNERABILITY

Haddock are considered resilient because they mature young and have a relatively short lifespan. Females are 100% mature at age 3, and the maximum known age is 14 years, with females becoming larger and living longer than males. There is evidence that heavy fishing pressure has selected for decreases in the age and size at maturity, which has the potential to adversely affect the number and health of young. Haddock inherent vulnerability is considered a “low” conservation concern.

STATUS OF STOCKS

Information reported in this section refers to fisheries in the Gulf of Maine and on Georges Bank. There are also five Haddock fishing areas off the East coast of Canada of which only two are presently open. In Canada, Haddock landings have declined by almost one-third over the past decade. On the Georges Bank, the population dropped drastically in the early 1960s from about 50 000 – 100 000 mt of spawning females to a population with 10 000 – 75 000 mts of spawning females. In the late 1990s, both this population and the GOM stock have shown increases, believed to be the result of favourable spawning and juvenile survivorship, coupled with strict management measures implemented in 1995 that have eliminated overfishing. Low numbers still pose a “high” conservation concern, but may now increase in the absence of overfishing.

NATURE OF BY-CATCH

Information reported in this section refers to fisheries in the Gulf of Maine and on Georges Bank. There are also five Haddock fishing areas off the East coast of Canada of which only two are presently open. In Canada, Haddock landings have declined by almost one-third over the past decade. On the Georges Bank, the population dropped drastically in the early 1960s from about 50 000 – 100 000 mt of spawning females to a population with 10 000 – 75 000 mts of spawning females. In the late 1990s, both this population and the GOM The trawl fishery for Haddock has substantial bycatch and discard of unmarketable and undersized catch. Trip limits, used to regulate catch, are also likely to cause otherwise market-worthy fish to be discarded as fishers try to maximize the value of each trip. The allowable mesh size has been increased recently, decreasing the catch of smaller-sized fishes. Trawling is also known to take small numbers of marine mammals and sea turtles, but observer coverage is only 5% and logbooks may underestimate true bycatch. Apparent discard rates (in the US) in 2001 were 0-5% of catch. Bycatch in this fishery is a “moderate” conservation concern.

HABITAT EFFECTS

Trawling for groundfish is thought to significantly alter or damage a large portion of the seabed and associated ecosystem and degree of recovery is unknown. The effect of Haddock trawling on habitats and ecosystems is considered of “high” conservation concern.

MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS

Many measures have been implemented to manage Haddock – particularly the trawl fishery – but these have not prevented declines of Haddock stocks. Until stocks have fully recovered, these methods can only be considered moderately effective. Managers of the Northeastern Groundfish resources assess Haddock frequently (annually or semi-annually), comparing current information to know biological reference points. Mesh size rules, regulations on gear to reduce discard, as well as seasonal and permanent closures are all used to manage Haddock. The Haddock trawl-fishery management is considered “moderately effective”.

IMPORTANT QUESTION TO ASK

How was this Haddock caught?
Trawl-caught Haddock should be avoided.

HEALTH RISKS
View consumption advisories

Contaminant levels do not warrant a consumption advisory.

MSC CERTIFIED

No.

 

 

 

 

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