IAS NOVA Interactive Atlas · Geography Through Maps
FISHING GROUNDS OF THE WORLD
40 major banks, shelves, upwelling systems and current-convergence zones. Hover any ground or current.
Coloured fishing-ground zones are generalized educational extents, not legal or regulatory boundaries. Current courses and ground limits are approximate at world-map scale.
ALL 40 FISHING GROUNDS
Atlantic and adjacent seas
Pacific Ocean
Indian Ocean and Australasia
Southern Ocean
What Are Fishing Banks and Fishing Grounds?
A fishing ground is a marine area where fish and other harvestable organisms occur in commercially useful concentrations. A fishing bank is a particular physical type of ground: a shallow submarine plateau, ridge or elevated part of the continental shelf. Grand Banks, Georges Bank and Dogger Bank are famous examples.
Banks are productive because their shallow water keeps much of the water column within reach of sunlight, while tides and currents stir nutrients upward. Sand, gravel and mixed seabeds also provide feeding and spawning habitat for bottom fish and shellfish. Yet not every major ground is a bank. The Humboldt, Benguela, Canary and California grounds depend mainly on coastal upwelling; Japanese and Newfoundland grounds depend strongly on current convergence; tuna grounds follow mobile ocean fronts.
Conditions Needed for Rich Fishing Grounds
1. Nutrient supply
Nitrate, phosphate, silicate and iron must enter the surface layer through upwelling, vertical mixing, rivers, sea-ice melt or shelf exchange.
2. Sunlit water
Phytoplankton need light. Shallow shelves and banks keep nutrients close to the photic zone where photosynthesis occurs.
3. Mixing and fronts
Tides, winds and converging currents mix water and create fronts that concentrate plankton, baitfish and predators.
4. Suitable temperature
Temperature controls metabolism, spawning and migration. Boundaries between water masses often gather several species.
5. Habitat and nursery areas
Estuaries, mangroves, seagrasses, reefs, gravel beds and shelf sediments shelter juveniles and support food webs.
6. Oxygen and water quality
Productivity needs adequate dissolved oxygen. Excess nutrients can instead cause hypoxia, habitat loss and fish mortality.
7. Seasonal timing
Spring blooms, monsoon upwelling, ice-edge retreat and spawning migrations determine when a ground becomes most productive.
8. Sustainable management
Biological richness does not prevent collapse. Catch controls, habitat protection, monitoring and international cooperation determine long-term yield.
Complete Reference: 40 Major Fishing Grounds
Open any ground for its location, productivity mechanism, supporting currents, main catch and key examination fact.
Atlantic and adjacent seas
Grand Banks of Newfoundland
Location: Northwest Atlantic, southeast of Newfoundland
Productivity engine: A broad shallow continental shelf where the cold Labrador Current meets warm Gulf Stream water, producing fronts, mixing and high plankton productivity.
Currents: Labrador Current and Gulf Stream
Major catch: Atlantic cod, haddock, halibut, capelin, redfish and scallops
Exam fact: The classic current-convergence fishing ground; historic overfishing caused the 1992 Canadian cod moratorium.
Georges Bank
Location: Northwest Atlantic between Cape Cod and Nova Scotia
Productivity engine: A shallow bank with strong tidal mixing, productive shelf-edge fronts and interaction between Gulf Stream-derived and cooler shelf waters.
Currents: Gulf Stream influence, Labrador-origin shelf water and tidal currents
Major catch: Haddock, cod, Atlantic herring, yellowtail flounder and sea scallops
Exam fact: Its shallow crest and vigorous tides continually recycle nutrients into the sunlit surface layer.
Scotian Shelf
Location: Atlantic margin of Nova Scotia
Productivity engine: Wide shelf banks, shelf-break mixing and cool nutrient-bearing waters support both demersal and pelagic fisheries.
Currents: Labrador Current branches and North Atlantic shelf circulation
Major catch: Haddock, pollock, halibut, lobster, snow crab and scallops
Exam fact: Includes productive banks such as Browns, Emerald and Sable Island banks.
Gulf of St Lawrence
Location: Estuarine gulf of eastern Canada
Productivity engine: River nutrients, seasonal ice mixing, estuarine circulation and a deep cold-water layer create diverse habitats.
Currents: Labrador-influenced inflow and estuarine outflow through Cabot Strait
Major catch: Snow crab, northern shrimp, herring, mackerel, lobster and groundfish
Exam fact: One of the world’s largest estuaries; productivity depends on both river discharge and Atlantic exchange.
Iceland–Faroe Fishing Grounds
Location: Shelves and banks around Iceland and the Faroe Islands
Productivity engine: Warm Atlantic water meets colder Arctic-origin water over shelves, ridges and fronts rich in plankton.
Currents: North Atlantic Drift, Irminger Current and East Greenland Current influence
Major catch: Cod, haddock, saithe, herring, mackerel, capelin and redfish
Exam fact: The Iceland–Faroe ridge and surrounding shelves concentrate both migrating pelagic fish and bottom fish.
North Sea and Dogger Bank
Location: Shallow sea between Great Britain and continental Europe
Productivity engine: Extensive continental shelf, strong tides, frontal mixing and nutrient inflow from the Atlantic and rivers.
Currents: North Atlantic inflow and North Sea residual circulation
Major catch: Herring, mackerel, cod, haddock, plaice, sole and sandeel
Exam fact: Dogger Bank is a vast shallow sandbank; seasonal fronts separate mixed and stratified waters.
Norwegian, Lofoten and Barents Grounds
Location: Norwegian Sea, Lofoten shelf and Barents Sea
Productivity engine: Atlantic and Arctic water masses meet along fronts; seasonal blooms and shelf-edge mixing support huge stocks.
Currents: Norwegian Atlantic Current and cold Arctic currents
Major catch: Northeast Arctic cod, haddock, herring, capelin, mackerel and saithe
Exam fact: Lofoten is a major spawning region for migratory skrei cod from the Barents Sea.
Baltic Sea Fishing Grounds
Location: Brackish inland sea of northern Europe
Productivity engine: River nutrient supply, shallow basins and seasonal plankton blooms support fisheries, but low salinity and hypoxia limit diversity.
Currents: Baltic estuarine circulation and episodic North Sea inflows
Major catch: Baltic herring, sprat, cod and salmon
Exam fact: A brackish-water fishery where oxygen conditions in deep basins strongly affect cod reproduction.
Bay of Biscay and Iberian Shelf
Location: Atlantic coasts of France, Spain and Portugal
Productivity engine: Shelf-break fronts, seasonal coastal upwelling and river plumes stimulate plankton and pelagic fish.
Currents: Canary Current system and seasonal Iberian upwelling
Major catch: Anchovy, sardine, hake, mackerel, horse mackerel and tuna
Exam fact: Summer northerly winds strengthen upwelling off western Iberia; the Bay of Biscay anchovy is closely managed.
Canary Current and Northwest African Grounds
Location: Morocco, Western Sahara and Mauritania shelf
Productivity engine: Persistent trade-wind upwelling lifts cold nutrient-rich water into the photic zone along a broad shelf.
Currents: Cold Canary Current
Major catch: Sardine, sardinella, mackerel, horse mackerel, hake, octopus and squid
Exam fact: One of the four great eastern-boundary upwelling systems of the world.
Gulf of Guinea Grounds
Location: West African coast from Côte d’Ivoire to Gabon
Productivity engine: Seasonal coastal upwelling, river plumes and equatorial current interactions create productive nearshore waters.
Currents: Guinea Current, South Equatorial Current and equatorial upwelling
Major catch: Sardinella, anchovy, tuna, croakers, shrimp and small pelagics
Exam fact: Productivity is seasonal and varies sharply with the strength of coastal upwelling and river discharge.
Benguela and Namibia–Cape Grounds
Location: Southwest African coast from Angola to South Africa
Productivity engine: Powerful wind-driven upwelling supplies nutrients along the continental shelf; fronts and retention cells concentrate fish.
Currents: Cold Benguela Current
Major catch: Anchovy, sardine, hake, horse mackerel, rock lobster and monkfish
Exam fact: A highly productive eastern-boundary system, but low-oxygen events and shifting sardine–anchovy regimes create volatility.
Patagonian and Falkland Shelf
Location: Southwest Atlantic off Argentina and the Falkland Islands
Productivity engine: A very broad shelf, strong shelf-break fronts and convergence between subtropical and subantarctic waters.
Currents: Cold Falkland Current and warm Brazil Current
Major catch: Argentine hake, hoki, squid, scallops, toothfish and southern blue whiting
Exam fact: The Brazil–Falkland Confluence is one of the sharpest ocean fronts in the world.
Brazilian Shelf Grounds
Location: Southwest Atlantic along eastern and southern Brazil
Productivity engine: Shelf fronts, river plumes, coastal upwelling near Cabo Frio and Brazil–Falkland transition waters raise productivity.
Currents: Warm Brazil Current with cooler shelf and upwelled water
Major catch: Sardine, croaker, mullet, shrimp, tuna and demersal fish
Exam fact: Cabo Frio upwelling is a localized productivity hotspot on an otherwise warm western-boundary margin.
Mediterranean, Adriatic and Aegean Grounds
Location: Mediterranean Sea and its productive marginal basins
Productivity engine: Narrow shelves, river deltas, straits, seasonal fronts and localized upwelling support fisheries in an otherwise nutrient-poor sea.
Currents: Mediterranean gyres, Atlantic inflow and local coastal currents
Major catch: Anchovy, sardine, bluefin tuna, hake, red mullet, octopus and shrimp
Exam fact: The northern Adriatic, Gulf of Lions and Aegean shelves are among the more productive Mediterranean sectors.
Gulf of Mexico Fishing Grounds
Location: Continental shelves surrounding the Gulf of Mexico
Productivity engine: Mississippi and other river nutrients, estuaries, reefs and Loop Current fronts sustain pelagic and demersal fisheries.
Currents: Loop Current and Gulf Stream source waters
Major catch: Menhaden, shrimp, red snapper, grouper, oysters and tuna
Exam fact: River nutrients enhance production but excessive loading can also produce a large seasonal hypoxic zone.
Caribbean Sea Fishing Grounds
Location: Island shelves, banks and upwelling zones of the Caribbean
Productivity engine: Coral reefs, seagrass beds, island shelves, river plumes and localized coastal upwelling create scattered rather than continuous grounds.
Currents: Caribbean Current and North Equatorial Current
Major catch: Spiny lobster, queen conch, snapper, grouper, small pelagics and tuna
Exam fact: The region is biologically diverse but its narrow shelves limit the size of many commercial stocks.
Pacific Ocean
Bering Sea and Aleutian Grounds
Location: Eastern Bering shelf and Aleutian arc
Productivity engine: An immense shallow shelf, sea-ice edge blooms, tidal mixing and nutrient exchange through Aleutian passes create exceptional productivity.
Currents: Bering Slope Current, Alaska Stream and subarctic gyre circulation
Major catch: Walleye pollock, Pacific cod, salmon, halibut, snow crab and king crab
Exam fact: The eastern Bering shelf supports one of the largest single-species fisheries on Earth: Alaska pollock.
Gulf of Alaska Grounds
Location: Shelf and slope from the Alaska Peninsula to southeast Alaska
Productivity engine: Shelf-edge mixing, coastal downwelling, eddies and nutrient exchange around islands and fjords support rich food webs.
Currents: Alaska Current and Alaska Stream
Major catch: Pacific salmon, pollock, Pacific cod, halibut, sablefish and crab
Exam fact: Productivity is concentrated along the shelf, seamounts, eddies and coastal ecosystems rather than the deep central gulf.
California–Oregon Upwelling Grounds
Location: West coast of North America from Baja California to British Columbia
Productivity engine: Equatorward winds drive seasonal coastal upwelling, supplying nutrients to a narrow shelf and productive coastal transition zone.
Currents: Cold California Current
Major catch: Sardine, anchovy, Pacific hake, salmon, squid, Dungeness crab and tuna
Exam fact: Productivity shifts strongly with El Niño, marine heatwaves and the timing of spring upwelling.
Gulf of California Grounds
Location: Narrow sea between Baja California and mainland Mexico
Productivity engine: Tidal mixing, winter upwelling, island wakes and high nutrient renewal make this subtropical gulf unusually productive.
Currents: California Current influence and internal gulf circulation
Major catch: Sardine, anchovy, shrimp, squid, tuna and demersal fish
Exam fact: Often called an oceanographic laboratory because strong tides and steep basins create intense mixing.
Sea of Okhotsk Grounds
Location: Marginal sea between Siberia, Kamchatka, Sakhalin and the Kurils
Productivity engine: Seasonal sea ice, river nutrients, shelf mixing and exchange through the Kuril straits produce high subarctic productivity.
Currents: Oyashio source waters and Okhotsk circulation
Major catch: Pollock, Pacific salmon, herring, crab, cod and flatfish
Exam fact: Dense shelf water formed here helps ventilate the North Pacific and transport iron and nutrients.
Hokkaido–Kuril–Sanriku Grounds
Location: Pacific side of northern Japan and the Kuril Islands
Productivity engine: Warm Kuroshio water meets cold Oyashio water, forming a mobile, nutrient-rich frontal zone.
Currents: Warm Kuroshio and cold Oyashio
Major catch: Sardine, mackerel, saury, salmon, squid and tuna
Exam fact: The Kuroshio–Oyashio convergence is the Pacific counterpart of the Gulf Stream–Labrador convergence.
Sea of Japan Grounds
Location: Sea between Japan, Korea and Russia
Productivity engine: Shelf breaks, winter mixing, coastal currents and productive fronts support pelagic and demersal fisheries.
Currents: Tsushima Warm Current and cold Liman Current
Major catch: Pollock, squid, mackerel, sardine, crab and yellowtail
Exam fact: Warm inflow through the Korea Strait meets colder northern water, producing strong regional contrasts.
Yellow Sea and East China Sea Grounds
Location: Shallow shelf seas between China, Korea, Taiwan and Japan
Productivity engine: Vast continental shelf, Yangtze and Yellow River plumes, tidal mixing and shelf fronts create high productivity.
Currents: Kuroshio margin, China Coastal Current and monsoonal shelf circulation
Major catch: Hairtail, croaker, anchovy, mackerel, squid and shrimp
Exam fact: Among the world’s most intensively fished shelf seas; eutrophication and heavy fishing pressure are major concerns.
South China Sea Grounds
Location: Shelves and island waters from Vietnam to the Philippines and Borneo
Productivity engine: Monsoon mixing, river plumes, shelf-edge upwelling, coral reefs and seagrass habitats support diverse fisheries.
Currents: Seasonally reversing South China Sea circulation
Major catch: Tuna, small pelagics, squid, shrimp, reef fish and demersal species
Exam fact: Extremely diverse and heavily used, but catches come from many dispersed coastal and offshore grounds.
Philippine and Celebes Sea Grounds
Location: Archipelagic waters east and south of the Philippines
Productivity engine: Island wakes, straits, fronts, coral ecosystems and access to deep oceanic tuna habitat concentrate fish.
Currents: North Equatorial Current branches and Indonesian Throughflow
Major catch: Skipjack, yellowfin and bigeye tuna, sardine, round scad and reef fish
Exam fact: The western Pacific warm pool is not uniformly nutrient-rich; productive hotspots form near islands, fronts and upwelling zones.
Peru–Chile or Humboldt Grounds
Location: Southeast Pacific along Peru and Chile
Productivity engine: Persistent wind-driven upwelling brings cold nutrient-rich water into the photic zone, sustaining enormous plankton blooms.
Currents: Cold Humboldt or Peru Current
Major catch: Peruvian anchoveta, sardine, jack mackerel, hake and giant squid
Exam fact: One of Earth’s most productive marine ecosystems; El Niño suppresses upwelling and can sharply reduce anchoveta availability.
Eastern and Central Tropical Pacific Tuna Grounds
Location: Equatorial Pacific from the American margin toward the central Pacific
Productivity engine: Equatorial divergence, current fronts, oxygen-minimum boundaries and convergence zones aggregate pelagic predators.
Currents: North and South Equatorial currents, Equatorial Counter Current and equatorial upwelling
Major catch: Skipjack, yellowfin and bigeye tuna, billfish and mahi-mahi
Exam fact: Unlike bank fisheries, these are mobile oceanic grounds tracked through fronts, temperature and prey rather than shallow depth.
Indian Ocean and Australasia
Somali–Oman and Arabian Sea Upwelling Grounds
Location: Horn of Africa, Gulf of Aden and Oman margin
Productivity engine: The southwest monsoon drives some of the strongest seasonal upwelling in the world, creating a short but intense production season.
Currents: Seasonally reversing Somali Current and SW Monsoon Current
Major catch: Sardine, mackerel, tuna, billfish, sharks and lobster
Exam fact: The productivity engine reverses with the monsoon; summer upwelling is strongest off Somalia and Oman.
West Coast of India and Arabian Sea Grounds
Location: Kerala–Karnataka–Goa–Gujarat shelf and adjacent Arabian Sea
Productivity engine: Monsoon upwelling, coastal currents, river discharge and a broad shelf in the north support seasonal fisheries.
Currents: West India Coastal Current and monsoon circulation
Major catch: Oil sardine, Indian mackerel, tuna, pomfret, prawns and cephalopods
Exam fact: The southwest monsoon intensifies mixing and upwelling, while oxygen-minimum waters shape habitat offshore.
Bay of Bengal Fishing Grounds
Location: Northern Bay, east Indian shelf, Bangladesh and Myanmar coasts
Productivity engine: Huge river plumes, mangroves, deltas, cyclonic mixing and shelf waters support high coastal productivity despite strong open-ocean stratification.
Currents: Seasonally reversing East India Coastal Current
Major catch: Hilsa, shrimp, pomfret, tuna, croakers and ribbonfish
Exam fact: Freshwater stratification can limit nutrient mixing offshore, so the richest grounds cluster near shelves, fronts and river mouths.
Seychelles and East African Tuna Grounds
Location: Western tropical Indian Ocean around Seychelles and East Africa
Productivity engine: Island wakes, equatorial fronts, eddies and monsoon-driven productivity concentrate migratory tuna.
Currents: South Equatorial Current, Equatorial Counter Current and monsoon circulation
Major catch: Skipjack, yellowfin and bigeye tuna, billfish and small pelagics
Exam fact: A major purse-seine tuna region centred on mobile ocean fronts rather than shallow fishing banks.
Mozambique Channel and Madagascar Grounds
Location: Channel between Mozambique and Madagascar plus island shelves
Productivity engine: Large eddies, island wakes, shelf upwelling and current shear generate productive hotspots.
Currents: South Equatorial Current branches and Agulhas system
Major catch: Tuna, shrimp, lobster, small pelagics and demersal reef fish
Exam fact: Mesoscale eddies move nutrients and aggregate tuna throughout the channel.
Indonesian, Arafura and Timor Sea Grounds
Location: Shallow seas and straits of maritime Southeast Asia
Productivity engine: Broad shelves, monsoon mixing, river and mangrove nutrients, tidal straits and the Indonesian Throughflow sustain diverse fisheries.
Currents: Indonesian Throughflow and seasonally reversing monsoon currents
Major catch: Tuna, shrimp, small pelagics, snapper, grouper and demersal fish
Exam fact: The Arafura shelf is especially important for shrimp and demersal fisheries; archipelagic straits concentrate pelagic fish.
Northwest Australian Shelf Grounds
Location: Timor Sea and northwest shelf of Australia
Productivity engine: Tides, shelf-break fronts, internal waves and seasonal current changes create localized productivity on a tropical shelf.
Currents: Indonesian Throughflow and Leeuwin Current influence
Major catch: Prawns, tropical snapper, emperor fish, mackerel and tuna
Exam fact: Productivity is patchier than in major upwelling systems because the warm Leeuwin Current tends to suppress coastal upwelling.
Great Australian Bight and Bass Strait Grounds
Location: Southern Australian shelf from the Bight to Bass Strait
Productivity engine: Shelf-edge upwelling, winter mixing, productive gulfs and frontal systems support temperate fisheries.
Currents: Leeuwin Current extension, Flinders Current and subantarctic influence
Major catch: Southern bluefin tuna, sardine, rock lobster, abalone, scallops and demersal fish
Exam fact: Seasonal Bonney upwelling west of Bass Strait is an important feeding area for tuna and marine mammals.
New Zealand Shelf and Chatham Rise
Location: New Zealand shelves, plateau and Chatham Rise
Productivity engine: Subtropical and subantarctic waters meet across shelves and the Chatham Rise, producing strong fronts and deep-sea habitats.
Currents: East Australian Current extensions, subtropical front and Antarctic Circumpolar influence
Major catch: Hoki, orange roughy, squid, snapper, ling and southern blue whiting
Exam fact: Chatham Rise is a major bathymetric ridge and frontal zone east of New Zealand.
Southern Ocean
Scotia Sea and Weddell–Antarctic Peninsula Grounds
Location: South Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
Productivity engine: Sea-ice edge blooms, shelf-break fronts and current-driven retention support dense krill concentrations.
Currents: Antarctic Circumpolar Current and Weddell circulation
Major catch: Antarctic krill, Antarctic toothfish, Patagonian toothfish and icefish
Exam fact: Krill fisheries are concentrated in the Atlantic sector close to the Antarctic Peninsula and South Georgia.
Kerguelen–Heard Subantarctic Grounds
Location: Plateaus and islands of the southern Indian Ocean
Productivity engine: The Antarctic Circumpolar Current encounters shallow plateaus, generating fronts, mixing and productive benthic and pelagic habitats.
Currents: Antarctic Circumpolar Current
Major catch: Patagonian toothfish, mackerel icefish and krill
Exam fact: Subantarctic plateaus act like submerged islands that interrupt the current and enhance local food webs.
Test Yourself: Prelims-Style MCQs
Q1. The Grand Banks became exceptionally productive mainly because of:
The broad shallow shelf combines with frontal mixing between warm Gulf Stream and cold Labrador waters.
Q2. Which current supports the Peru–Chile anchoveta fishery?
The cold Humboldt Current is associated with intense coastal upwelling off Peru and Chile.
Q3. Dogger Bank is located in the:
Dogger Bank is a vast shallow bank in the North Sea.
Q4. The Kuroshio–Oyashio meeting zone lies mainly near:
Warm Kuroshio and cold Oyashio waters meet east of Hokkaido and Sanriku.
Q5. Which pair represents major eastern-boundary upwelling systems?
Humboldt and Benguela are cold eastern-boundary currents with powerful coastal upwelling.
Q6. The Somali fishing ground is strongly seasonal because the current:
The Somali Current and regional upwelling reverse or reorganize with monsoon winds.
Q7. A fishing bank is best described as:
Banks are relatively shallow parts of the continental margin where light, mixing and nutrients can support high productivity.
Q8. Which ground is famous for Alaska pollock?
The eastern Bering shelf sustains one of the world’s largest pollock fisheries.
Q9. Why are warm–cold current convergences productive?
Convergence fronts mix and concentrate water masses, plankton and fish prey.
Q10. El Niño often reduces the Peru anchoveta fishery by:
El Niño weakens normal trade-wind-driven upwelling and alters anchoveta distribution and survival.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a fishing bank?
A fishing bank is a relatively shallow elevation or broad shallow part of the continental shelf. Sunlight can penetrate much of the water column, tides and currents mix nutrients, and bottom habitats support spawning and feeding. Grand Banks, Georges Bank and Dogger Bank are classic examples.
Why do major fishing grounds form where warm and cold currents meet?
Contrasting water masses create fronts. Mixing brings nutrients into the sunlit layer, while converging water can concentrate plankton, baitfish and larger predators. The Gulf Stream–Labrador and Kuroshio–Oyashio zones are leading examples.
Why is upwelling important for fisheries?
Upwelling replaces nutrient-depleted surface water with cold water rich in nitrate, phosphate and other nutrients. Phytoplankton multiply, zooplankton feed on them, and large stocks of pelagic fish develop.
Are all productive fishing grounds shallow banks?
No. Many are shallow banks or shelves, but others are coastal upwelling systems, river-plume zones, sea-ice edges, coral and mangrove habitats, or mobile oceanic fronts used by tuna.
Which are the four great eastern-boundary upwelling systems?
The Humboldt or Peru–Chile, California, Canary and Benguela systems. Monsoon-driven upwelling in the western Arabian Sea is another major seasonal system.
Does a biologically productive sea automatically produce a sustainable fishery?
No. Stock productivity can be damaged by excessive fishing, habitat loss, pollution, warming and poor recruitment. Effective monitoring, catch limits and ecosystem-based management are essential.
Does the map show legal fishing boundaries?
No. The coloured zones are generalized educational extents of major grounds and banks. They are not exclusive economic zones, national claims, FAO statistical boundaries or regulatory closures.
Sources and Further Reading
- FAO Major Fishing Areas — official global marine fishing-area framework and maps.
- FAO Fisheries Department Fishing Maps — current statistical fishing-area maps.
- NOAA: What is upwelling? — explanation of nutrient-rich upwelling and productive fishing grounds.
- NOAA Currents Tutorial: Coastal Upwelling — global upwelling examples and fisheries link.
- FAO Global Marine Fish-Stock Assessment 2025 — sustainability context across FAO marine areas.
