The Hellenic Centre for Marine Research (HCMR) holds a significant amount of scientific data covering various disciplines of the marine environment in the Greek Seas. The Institute of Marine Biological Resources (IMBR/HCMR) endeavors to assess the fishery resources by undertaking fishery independent experimental surveys, as well as monitoring the commercial fisheries activities with on-board observers. However, accession to these data and furthermore compatibility of the available formats was a complicated task, since data were either stored on a local intranet database or on many individual PCs . “IMAS-Fish” was developed to overcome these issues by: (i) homogenizing all the available datasets under a relational database, (ii) facilitating quality control and data entry, (iii) offering easy access to raw data, (iv) providing processed results through a series of classical and advanced fishery statistics algorithms, and (v) visualizing the results on maps using GIS technology. Available datasets cover among others: Fishery independent experimental surveys data (locations, species, catch compositions, biological data); Commercial fishing activities (fishing gear, locations, catch compositions, discards); Market sampling data (species, biometry, maturity, ageing); Satellite derived ocean data (Sea surface temperature, Salinity, Wind speed, Chlorophyll-a concentrations, Photosynthetically active radiation); Oceanographic parameters (CTD measurements); Official national fishery statistics; Fishing fleet registry and VMS data; Fishing ports inventory; Fishing legislation archive (national and EU); Bathymetry grids. Currently, the homogenized database holds a total of more than 100,000,000 records. The web-based application is accessible through an internet browser and can serve as a valuable tool for all involved stakeholders: fisheries scientists, state officials responsible for management, fishermen cooperatives, academics, students and NGOs . This article describes in detail the IMAS-Fish implementation technicalities and provides examples on how can it be used for scientific and management purposes setting new standards in fishery science.
KAVADAS Stefanos;
DAMALAS Dimitrios;
GEORGAKARAKOS Eustratios;
MARAVELIAS Christos;
TSERPES G.;
PAPACONSTANTINOU Constantinos;
BAZIGOS George;
2013-08-12
NATL CENTRE MARINE RESEARCH
JRC69583
1108-393X,
http://www.medit-mar-sc.net/index.php/marine/article/view/324,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC69583,