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European pilchard

Sardina pilchardus

Sardina pilchardus (European pilchard)
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Distribution
Distribution
Distribution map: Sardina pilchardus (European pilchard)




Profile status
Dossier:
not provided by us yet
WelfareCheck:
C (2026-07-03)
Advice:
not provided by us yet
Taxonomy
Class:
Actinopteri
Order:
Clupeiformes
Family:
Alosidae
Source:
Ethograms
In the wild:
not investigated by us yet
Farm/lab:
not investigated by us yet
Catch/lab:
not investigated by us yet
Habitat
Habitat
Temperature:
not investigated by us yet
Photoperiod:
not investigated by us yet
Substrate:
not investigated by us yet
Growth
Growth
Length:
not investigated by us yet
Weight:
not investigated by us yet
Maturity:
not investigated by us yet
Malformations:
not investigated by us yet
Swimming
Swimming
Home range:
not investigated by us yet
Depth:
not investigated by us yet
Migration:
not investigated by us yet
Activity type:
not investigated by us yet
Reproduction
Reproduction
Nest building:
not investigated by us yet
Courtship:
not investigated by us yet
Mating type:
not investigated by us yet
Brood care:
not investigated by us yet
Social behaviour
Social behaviour
Aggregation:
Cschool
Organisation:
not investigated by us yet
Aggression:
Cno
Handling
Handling
Stress | farm:
not investigated by us yet
Slaughter | farm:
not investigated by us yet
Stress | catch:
Cyes
Slaughter | catch:
Cno
Commercial concerns
Frequency | farm:
not investigated by us yet
Methods | farm:
not investigated by us yet
Frequency | catch:
Cup to 61,000,000,000 individuals/year
Methods | catch:
Cbottom trawls, pelagic trawls, purse seine

Catching remarks

Sardina pilchardus (European pilchard) is a small, schooling pelagic fish found in coastal waters of the north-east Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Black Sea. Sold fresh, frozen, dried, smoked, or canned, it is extensively targeted by fisheries throughout its range and is also caught as a secondary species in fisheries targeting Engraulis encrasicolus (European anchovy), Scomber colias (Atlantic chub mackerel), Scomber scombrus (Atlantic mackerel), and Trachurus trachurus (Horse mackerel). It is captured using commercial methods such as purse seines, pelagic trawls, and bottom trawls as well as several small-scale gears.

During purse seine capture, the pilchards endure various welfare hazards, including exposure to loud engine noise, intense crowding in the net for extended periods, transfer to onboard storage units via crowded brail nets, exposure to air and tight packing (leading to flopping on plastic crates or in boxes while being crushed by the weight of their con-specifics), an agonising death without prior humane stunning and slaughter, and a high probability of being preyed upon by marine mammals and seabirds during encirclement, hauling, slipping, and discarding. These hazards lead to consequences such as physical injuries, asphyxia, temperature shock, physiological stress, and exhaustion, among others.

Important mitigation measures include, but are not limited to, targeting smaller schools of fishes, reducing crowding duration, slipping excess or unwanted catch rather than discarding it, using relatively lower-stress slipping methods, pumping individuals to storage units instead of brailing, using marine megafauna deterrent devices, such as Dolphin Deterrent Devices for marine mammals and visual deterrents like the Scarybird device for seabirds throughout the fishing process, and the immediate humane stunning and slaughter of the caught fishes. Given that there is currently no viable solution to humanely stun and slaughter the caught fishes, there is an urgent need for further research to develop such technologies.

For details see: WelfareCheck | catch (latest major release: )

FAQ
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