Seasonal Migrants and Traditional Ecological Knowledge in a Region of Risk: The Pulse Seine Fisheries in Limfjorden, Denmark, c. 1740-1860

Bo Poulsen, Camilla Andersen

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Abstract

This article presents the commercial scale and organization of the Danish pulse seine eel fishery in the Limfjord before the advent of modern offshore fisheries. Partly, for environmental concerns, the pulse seine fishery was tightly regulated, with every seine having to be checked and certified by the local district bailiffs. Here, we present the first in-depth analysis of all preserved certificates for the 18th-19th century pulse seines, totalling over 2,100, and we then combine this data with a demographic and a GIS-based database. We profile the typical fishermen to be migrant or resident in the Limfjord, and we suggest the overall conditions for eel to be in decline. The migrant fishermen came from only a select few impoverished settlements in the dunes next to the North Sea, and over a 100-year period of study, we document a gradual shift towards pulse seine fisheries by resident Limfjord fishermen and farmers.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEnvironment and History
Number of pages30
ISSN0967-3407
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 17 Oct 2024

Keywords

  • Traditional ecological knowledge
  • Fisheries
  • Fisheries history
  • environmental history
  • marine environmental history
  • eel
  • Limfjorden

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  • Living on the Edge

    Poulsen, B. (PI), Andersen, C. (Project Participant) & Lund, R. L. (Project Participant)

    01/08/201931/12/2023

    Project: Research

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