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Historical Marine Footprint for Europe 1500-2019 - Supplementary Information.pdf (2.6 MB)

Online Resource Historical Marine Footprint for Atlantic Europe 1500-2019

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Version 2 2023-11-13, 12:51
Version 1 2023-03-08, 21:26
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posted on 2023-11-13, 12:51 authored by Patrick HayesPatrick Hayes, Poul HolmPoul Holm, John NichollsJohn Nicholls

Over the last 500 years, Europe (excluding Russia) consumed over 2,000 million tonnes of ocean biomass. This is based on detailed historical data that we provide for human consumption per capita which was stable from 1500 to 1899 and tripled in the twentieth century. In the last 300 years, cod and herring dominated human seafood consumption. Whaling for non-food uses peaked in the 1830s and declined as cetaceans became scarce. Seafood consumption increased rapidly after 1900, and by the late 1930s, annual marine consumption in Atlantic Europe reached 7 million t of biomass, facilitated by the globalisation of whaling. Atlantic European consumption, including fishmeal for feed, peaked at more than 12 million tonnes annually in the 1970s, but declined thereafter. The marine footprint of Atlantic Europe was significant well before modern fisheries statistics commenced. Our findings can inform future assessments of ocean health and marine life’s importance for human society.

Funding

ERC 4-OCEANS grant agreement 951649

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