West of Scotland Herring Hunt (WOSHH)
  West of Scotland Herring Hunt (WOSHH)

Herring helped to generate local income, identity, and societal change for centuries in Scotland, but their numbers on the west coast have been in decline since the 1970s. Since herring use specific seabed habitat to deposit their eggs on, it is essential for population recovery that such areas are available when herring return to spawn.

The three-year West of Scotland Herring Hunt (WOSHH) project (11/21- 10/24) seeks to detect if, when and where large herring shoals are present in inshore waters on the west coast of Scotland, particularly during the spring-spawning season. WOSHH also aims to identify herring spawning habitat on the west coast to conserve and enhance it. Healthy spawning habitat could help rebuild inshore herring populations, with potentially positive social and economic impacts, as well as improving biodiversity and ecosystem functioning.

WOSHH aims to achieve this by
鈥ollecting habitat information working with Scottish west coast communities, organizations, industry, and individuals, from the Clyde to Cape Wrath and the Hebrides
鈥ridging newly generated scientific information with local ecological knowledge (including historical)
鈥nviting citizen scientists to join in on 鈥渉erring hunts鈥 to record signs of herring presence using the 鈥淗erring Hunt鈥 web app
鈥apping into historical local ecological knowledge (e.g., from the last 鈥渉erring boom鈥 days) across the whole of the Scottish west coast
鈥tudying the role of complex seabed substrate (e.g., maerl) for reproductive success
鈥nvestigating historical herring catches, temperature and climatic anomalies to learn from the past and help predict future trends
鈥romote co-management and dialogue between marine stakeholders within inshore waters where space is limited
鈥hampion the integration of essential spawning habitat into management measures

WOSHH, led by 麻豆社区 and funded by the William Grant Foundation, collaborates with a wide range of partners to achieve the project鈥檚 goals.

Read more on WOSHH on the scottishherring.org webpage.

  • Start Date:

    1 November 2021

  • End Date:

    30 April 2025

  • Activity Type:

    Externally Funded Research

  • Funder:

    William Grant Foundation

  • Value:

    154132

Project Team