Abstract
The Planning Group on the Monitoring of Eel Quality met at the Research Institute Nature and Forest (INBO) Brussels, Belgium, on the 20–22 January 2015 during its first Workshop (WKPGMEQ) under the subject “Development of standardised and harmonised protocols for the estimation of eel quality”, chaired by Claude Belpaire (Belgium) and Olga Haenen (The Netherlands). There were 31 participants (21 attendees and 10 remote participants) representing 13 countries.
Reliable assessment of the eel stock quality and its quantitative effect on the reproductive stock is currently not possible, due to insufficient spatial and temporal data coverage (ICES 2009). This has emphasised the urgent need to establish a comprehensive overview with improved spatial coverage of the quality of the eel population across Europe as an essential and urgent requirement. Understanding the reproductive potential of the international spawning stock is a key component to predicting the effects on stock recovery of changes to silver eel escapement, arising from management actions implemented within Eel Management Plans.
To address this need, ICES 2012 recommended that Member States implement routine monitoring of lipid levels, contamination and diseases. Many countries have started compiling data on the health status of eels in their water bodies. Objectives for these monitoring actions are diverse and are not restricted to the framework of eel recovery. Eel quality is also monitored for different purposes, which include human health considerations and to meet requirements of the Water Framework Directive. Hence, there is a large amount of information collected by EU member countries. However, procedures with respect to sampling, analysis and reporting are not harmonised, hindering stock wide assessments and risking inefficient use of resources. Consequently, ICES (2009) identified the need to develop standardised and harmonised protocols for the estimation of eel quality, so that national data would be comparable between Member States and could be reliably incorporated in international stock assessments.
The objective of WKPGMEQ was to document standardised and harmonised protocols for the estimation of the quality of the European eel Anguilla anguilla, with regard to the bioaccumulation of contaminants and the presence of diseases, including parasites.
WKPGMEQ took advantage of the preparative work of the participants who in advance of the workshop drafted reports describing the framework and methods used in their countries for the assessment of contaminants and diseases in the eel. At the start of the meeting Member States’ country reports were presented. Two subgroups, covering contaminants and diseases respectively, further discussed the practical issues surrounding the sampling, assessment procedures, diagnostic approaches and reporting related to measuring contaminants and diagnosis of eel parasites and other diseases. As far as possible, common procedures and guidelines were described.
The report starts with an overview of the current eel quality assessments in the Member States, and further discusses general issues on sampling of eel quality assessments. It includes a chapter on the assessment of eel condition in terms of fitness and lipid levels. In further chapters best practices to (sub)sample, analyse, report and visualize contaminants in the eel are described. The disease sections focus on parasitic diseases (including the swimbladder parasite Anguillicoloides), and on viral and bacterial diseases. Possible ways to integrate data and to implement them into eel quality indices have been suggested. The workshop also discussed the future perspectives of using biomarkers of effects to assess eel health. Finally the report concludes describing the international context and future perspectives in eel health assessments.
Several recommendations were made to facilitate the further development of a framework to integrate eel quality assessments into the quantitative management of the eel stock. Member States should apply harmonised methods for eel quality assessments and reporting, and routine monitoring and reporting of lipid levels, contamination and diseases needs to be integrated in the requirements within the Eel Regulation. Raw data should be made available to the international community and the management of the Eel Quality Database needs a structural basis. There is an urgent need for an internationally coordinated research project aiming at improving the understanding and quantification of the effects of contaminants on the reproductive success of the European eel, to allow integration of quality indicators in stock wide assessments.
ICES, 2009. Report of the 2009 Session of the Joint EIFAC/ICES Working Group on Eels, FAO European Inland Fisheries Advisory Commission; International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, Göteborg, 7–12 September 2009, EIFAC Occasional Paper No. 45, ICES CM 2009/ACOM: 15. Rome, FAO/Copenhagen, ICES. 2010. p. 540 (Online).
ICES, 2012. Report of the 2012 Session of the Joint EIFAAC/ICES Working Group on Eels, Copenhagen, Denmark, 3–9 September 2012; ICES CM 2012/ACOM:18, EIFAAC Occasional Paper 49, 828 pp.
ICES, 2015. Report of the Workshop of a Planning Group on the Monitoring of Eel Quality under the subject “Development of standardized and harmonized protocols for the estimation of eel quality” (WKPGMEQ), 20–22 January 2015, Brussels, Belgium. ICES CM 2014/SSGEF:14. 274 pp.
Reliable assessment of the eel stock quality and its quantitative effect on the reproductive stock is currently not possible, due to insufficient spatial and temporal data coverage (ICES 2009). This has emphasised the urgent need to establish a comprehensive overview with improved spatial coverage of the quality of the eel population across Europe as an essential and urgent requirement. Understanding the reproductive potential of the international spawning stock is a key component to predicting the effects on stock recovery of changes to silver eel escapement, arising from management actions implemented within Eel Management Plans.
To address this need, ICES 2012 recommended that Member States implement routine monitoring of lipid levels, contamination and diseases. Many countries have started compiling data on the health status of eels in their water bodies. Objectives for these monitoring actions are diverse and are not restricted to the framework of eel recovery. Eel quality is also monitored for different purposes, which include human health considerations and to meet requirements of the Water Framework Directive. Hence, there is a large amount of information collected by EU member countries. However, procedures with respect to sampling, analysis and reporting are not harmonised, hindering stock wide assessments and risking inefficient use of resources. Consequently, ICES (2009) identified the need to develop standardised and harmonised protocols for the estimation of eel quality, so that national data would be comparable between Member States and could be reliably incorporated in international stock assessments.
The objective of WKPGMEQ was to document standardised and harmonised protocols for the estimation of the quality of the European eel Anguilla anguilla, with regard to the bioaccumulation of contaminants and the presence of diseases, including parasites.
WKPGMEQ took advantage of the preparative work of the participants who in advance of the workshop drafted reports describing the framework and methods used in their countries for the assessment of contaminants and diseases in the eel. At the start of the meeting Member States’ country reports were presented. Two subgroups, covering contaminants and diseases respectively, further discussed the practical issues surrounding the sampling, assessment procedures, diagnostic approaches and reporting related to measuring contaminants and diagnosis of eel parasites and other diseases. As far as possible, common procedures and guidelines were described.
The report starts with an overview of the current eel quality assessments in the Member States, and further discusses general issues on sampling of eel quality assessments. It includes a chapter on the assessment of eel condition in terms of fitness and lipid levels. In further chapters best practices to (sub)sample, analyse, report and visualize contaminants in the eel are described. The disease sections focus on parasitic diseases (including the swimbladder parasite Anguillicoloides), and on viral and bacterial diseases. Possible ways to integrate data and to implement them into eel quality indices have been suggested. The workshop also discussed the future perspectives of using biomarkers of effects to assess eel health. Finally the report concludes describing the international context and future perspectives in eel health assessments.
Several recommendations were made to facilitate the further development of a framework to integrate eel quality assessments into the quantitative management of the eel stock. Member States should apply harmonised methods for eel quality assessments and reporting, and routine monitoring and reporting of lipid levels, contamination and diseases needs to be integrated in the requirements within the Eel Regulation. Raw data should be made available to the international community and the management of the Eel Quality Database needs a structural basis. There is an urgent need for an internationally coordinated research project aiming at improving the understanding and quantification of the effects of contaminants on the reproductive success of the European eel, to allow integration of quality indicators in stock wide assessments.
ICES, 2009. Report of the 2009 Session of the Joint EIFAC/ICES Working Group on Eels, FAO European Inland Fisheries Advisory Commission; International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, Göteborg, 7–12 September 2009, EIFAC Occasional Paper No. 45, ICES CM 2009/ACOM: 15. Rome, FAO/Copenhagen, ICES. 2010. p. 540 (Online).
ICES, 2012. Report of the 2012 Session of the Joint EIFAAC/ICES Working Group on Eels, Copenhagen, Denmark, 3–9 September 2012; ICES CM 2012/ACOM:18, EIFAAC Occasional Paper 49, 828 pp.
ICES, 2015. Report of the Workshop of a Planning Group on the Monitoring of Eel Quality under the subject “Development of standardized and harmonized protocols for the estimation of eel quality” (WKPGMEQ), 20–22 January 2015, Brussels, Belgium. ICES CM 2014/SSGEF:14. 274 pp.
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - 2016 |
Thematic list
- Species policy
EWI Biomedical sciences
- B003-ecology
Taxonomic list
- freshwater eels (Anguillidae)
Policy
- fisheries policy
Geographic list
- Europe