Abstract
SUMMARY An hypothesis has been erected to account for the failure of the Plymouth herring fishery and the associated biological events in the early thirties. It was found that the quantity of winter phosphorus was inversely related to the quantity of pilchard eggs 6 months earlier and directly to the quantity of herring recruits a year earlier. It is thought that the differences in quantities of winter phosphorus have represented differences in numbers of 6-month-old pilchard larvae; the winter phosphorus provides the link between herring recruitment and numbers of pilchard eggs, suggesting that there has been competition between the herring and pilchard stocks, in their juvenile stages. Thus it is suggested that the Plymouth herring fishery failed in competition with the pilchard stock and that the other biological events which took place in the early thirties were a consequence of this postulated competitive change.

This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit: