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Dutch involvement in fisheries research prior to and in early ICES
Van Bennekom, A.J.; de Groot, S.J.; Otto, L. (2002). Dutch involvement in fisheries research prior to and in early ICES, in: Anderson, E.D. (Ed.) 100 Years of Science under ICES: Papers from a Symposium held in Helsinki, 1-4 August 2000. ICES Marine Science Symposia, 215: pp. 56-63
In: Anderson, E.D. (Ed.) (2002). 100 Years of Science under ICES: Papers from a Symposium held in Helsinki, 1-4 August 2000. ICES Marine Science Symposia, 215. ICES: Copenhagen. V, 610 pp., more
In: ICES Marine Science Symposia. ICES/Reitzel: Copenhagen. ISSN 0906-060X, more

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Keywords
    Aquatic communities > Plankton
    Fisheries
    Historical account
    Holland
    Nutrients (mineral)
    ANE, Netherlands [Marine Regions]; ANE, Netherlands, Westerschelde, Hoek [Marine Regions]; ANE, North Sea [Marine Regions]
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Van Bennekom, A.J., more
  • de Groot, S.J.
  • Otto, L.

Abstract
    The first General Secretary ofICES was P.P.C. Hoek, a well-known marine zoologist and a good organizer. As scientific adviser to the Dutch Council for Sea Fisheries, he stressed the need for proper scientific research before measures could be taken to prevent overfishing. For the foundation of ICES, concern about fish stocks (especially plaice) was just as important as relationships between hydrography and variations in the stocks of herring. ICES projects were a great impetus for marine science. At the new National Institute for Sea Research in Den Helder, fisheries, plankton, and sea- sonality of nutrients were studied. Later, the lack of permanent positions coupled with an interest in brackish inland waters contributed to a decline in research on the North Sea. After World War I, fisheries research suffered from fragmentation. In 1942, the various branches were reunited into the Netherlands lnstitute for Fisheries Research (RIVO), now in IJmuiden. The marine division of the Meteorological Institute (KNMI) remained active in North Sea hydrography, while the explosion in environmental research af ter World War II involved both governmental and other institutes in marine research relevant to ICES. A few research topics, initiated before 1910, but still of current interest (time series, nutrients, closed areas, and Phaeocystis blooms) are briefly considered.

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