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Common Name


Latin Name


CPUE (number of individuals per hour) Control


Windfarm Solenette Velvet Crab


Lesser spotted dogfish Cuttlefish Bullrout Scaldfish


Common dragonet Grey gurnard Lesser weever Dover Sole Pogge


Whiting Turbot


John Dory


Sea Scorpion Mackerel


Goby indet. Sprat Brill


Thornback Ray


Buglossidium luteum Necora puber


Scyliorhinus canicula Sepia officinalis


Myoxocephalus scorpius Arnoglossus laterna Callionymus lyra Eutrigla gurnardus Echiichthys vipera Solea solea


Agonus cataphractus Merlangius merlangus Psetta maxima Zeus faber


Taurulus bubalis Scomber scombrus Gobidae


Sprattus sprattus


Scophthalmus rhombus Raja clavata


0.7 0.7 -


1.5 -


1.5 -


0.7 - - - - - - - -


0.7 0.7 -


0.7


Feb 2013 May 2013 3.0


3.0 5.2 - -


1.5 2.2 1.5 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.7 - - - - - - - -


5.2 5.1 1.5 5.2 5.2 3.0 0.7 1.5 - - -


0.7 - - - - - -


0.7 -


Feb 2013 May 2013 6.8


-


0.7 -


1.5 -


1.5 -


1.5 0.8 0.7 -


0.8 0.7 0.7 0.7 - - - -


11.5.3.3 Epi-benthic surveys 38. A total 42 fish and invertebrate species were sampled using the 2m scientific beam trawl. Although species composition was broadly consistent with otter and beam trawl surveys the most abundant fish were small bodied non-commercial species such as e.g. solenette, sand goby and lesser weever. This difference is largely attributable to the use of the smaller meshed cod end used on the scientific 2m beam trawl.


39. Abundance of epi-benthic invertebrates was generally relatively low, with brown shrimp2 Crangon allmanni and Crangon crangon representing the most abundant species, followed by hermit crab Pagurus bernhardus. Results from the survey are described in further detail within Chapter 10 Benthic Ecology and summarised in Table 11.10.


2 Both species occur in commercial catches where they are marketed under the common name of ‘brown shrimp’


Preliminary Environmental Information May 2014


East Anglia THREE Offshore Windfarm


Chapter 11 Fish and Shellfish Page 27


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