Common octopus

Octopus vulgaris

4: OK - Needs improvement How we work out the ratings

What to check for

Location

Cantabrian Sea and Atlantic Iberian waters

Technical location

Atlantic, Northeast, Bay of Biscay (South), Portuguese Waters (East)

Caught by

Pot, trap or creel

Rating summary

Updated: December 2020

There is limited information on the population structure or stock status of common octopus in European waters. Abundance varies widely from year to year with no clear trends and is sensitive to environmental influences. There is concern over fishing pressure with reports of excessive effort, illegal fishing, exploitation of undersized octopus, and lack of effective surveillance and monitoring and control of the fishing activity in the region. Common octopus have high resilience to fishing pressure.

Small-scale fisheries land most octopuses, and the activity is mainly regulated at the regional level; the level of participation of the fishing industry in the management of their activity varies. No landings quotas are in place in the EU, or routine assessment of population to inform management decisions. A minimum landing weight is specified for common octopus in European waters. But this offers inadequate protection to the spawning stock and increases the probability of recruitment overfishing.

Generally, pot and traps have little impact on the environment. Nonetheless, there is high loss and damage of clay pots used for targeted octopus fishing, and potential for potting to disrupt sensitive habitats. Bycatch is negligible.

The Western Asturias Octopus Traps Fishery of Artisanal Cofradias is certified by the Marine Stewardship council.

How we worked out this Rating

References

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Common octopus
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