Whiting

Merlangius merlangus

What to check for

Location

Celtic Seas (southern), English Channel (west)

Technical location

Atlantic, Northeast, Bristol Channel, Celtic Sea (North), Celtic Sea (South), English Channel (West), Porcupine Bank, Southwest of Ireland (East), Southwest of Ireland (West), West of Ireland

Caught by

Net (demersal seine)

Rating summary

The Celtic Sea whiting population is at dangerously low levels, and there is no plan in place to help it recover. Therefore, it is Fish to Avoid.Rating last updated November 2025.

Technical consultation summary

Default red rating:Celtic Sea whiting is below Blim, with zero catch advice. Spawning stock biomass (SSB) has fallen rapidly from 60,675 tonnes in 2015 to 9,496 tonnes in 2025. It has been below MSY Btrigger, 50,818t since 2016, and below safe biological limits (Blim, 36,571t) since 2017. It is therefore in a severely depleted state, with a high risk of reduced recruitment. There is no precautionary recovery plan in place. Management measures have not effectively protected the stock. The TAC does not match the stock area, and recent catches have been above recommended levels. Discarding of small fish is too high. Whiting is part of a mixed fishery with cod and haddock. ICES projects that if haddock is fished at Maximum Sustainable Yield, whiting catch in 2025 will be 4,878 tonnes. This is higher than the zero-catch recommendation. Some Celtic whiting is caught by demersal seine, which is less damaging to seabed habitats than trawling but may have bycatch of vulnerable species.

How we worked out this Rating

References

Back to species
Whiting
How do we work out our ratings?

Learn more about how we calculate our sustainability ratings.

How our ratings work