The Chatham Rise is New Zealand's most productive and important commercial
fishing ground. The region is analogous to the North Sea's
Broad Fourteens, but is significantly deeper. Warm subtropical surface waters from the north and cold
subantarctic surface waters from the south meet in the vicinity of the Chatham Rise to create a
subtropical front. Nutrient rich waters from the south mix with warm northern waters and create ideal conditions for
plankton and the animals that feed on them. The fishing grounds near the subtropical front and particularly the Chatham Rise provide 60% of
New Zealand's fish catch. Because the Chatham Rise is relatively shallow, it is accessible to both
midwater trawling and
bottom trawling. Species include the main
hoki,
hake,
ling,
silver warehou,
squid,
orange roughy and deep sea (oreo)
dory fisheries. The traditional approach to
fisheries management has been to focus on a single species – determining how many can be caught before the breeding population is affected to the point of harming the species fishery. There is a current trend towards
ecosystem based fisheries. Removing any fish affects other
marine life up and down the
food chain, such as marine life that eat the fish, and the marine life eating the marine life that eat the fish. Scientists from
NIWA are examining over 40,000 fish stomachs to see what different species are eating across the Chatham Rise. These studies, combined with other studies on marine mammals and sea birds and with relevant ocean and climate studies, will show how the different parts fit together in the Chatham Rise ecosystem. ==Notes==