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monitoring

Marine Scotland Science (MSS) undertakes a wide range of monitoring covering many aspects of the Scottish marine ecosystem.

Monitoring is undertaken in Scottish Inshore Waters, using networks of volunteers and automatic recording equipment, as well as in Scottish Offshore Waters, using the MSS research vessels MRV Alba na Mara and MRV Scotia.

Marine Scotland Science also participates national monitoring programmes, such as:

  • UK Marine Monitoring and Assessment Strategy (UKMMAS)
  • UK Marine Environmental Change Network (MECN)
  • UK Marine Environmental Data and Information Network (MEDIN)

This group provides published data from monitoring these activities. For many activities, there are national or international standards for how the monitoring is undertaken.

Data Extent

License

UK Open Government Licence (OGL)

Other Access

The information on this page (the dataset metadata) is also available in these formats.

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via the DKAN API

National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS) 2023 Survey Design Data

The National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS) provides a national scale statistical survey of Scotland’s salmon rivers (Jackson et al., 2025). The foundation of the programme is a statistical survey design that ensures collection of unbiased, spatially representative data on the abundance of freshwater fish and the pressures that affect them, including water quality and genetic introgression from farm escapes. Comparisons to target benchmark densities for fry and parr lifestages for salmon (Malcolm et al., 2019a) and trout (Malcolm et al., in prep), allow an assessment of overall status / health.

In the absence of a national programme, the NEPS survey can still support important regional data collection initiatives (within Strata) by providing site locations generated from the larger statistical survey. This allows data to be brought together and analysed together at larger scales as required and as resources allow. However, it also allows local managers to monitor and assess salmonids within their region using robust methods developed over the last decade, strengthening confidence in both the data collected and the assessments that are undertaken. When combined with information on strata framesizes (i.e. the length of rivers in the sample frame) and benchmarks (expected mean densities) this potentially allows users to run GRTS analyses using the spsurvey R package (Dumelle et al., 2023). This DOI dataset package thus provides 3 datasets from the NEPS 2023 survey design. The NEPS 2023 survey (see Jackson et al., 2025 for details) is the latest available NEPS survey, pending changes to allow the collection of data from the Northern Isles. The package consists of:

  1. NEPS 2023 survey sites list including the survey weights, which are required to correctly analyse the data at regional scales (summary statistics should not be generated from site-wise density estimates without accounting for the survey weights). This is the NEPS 2023 site list following the full national NEPS sampling programme in 2023. See notes section below for information on use of the sites list.
  2. Benchmark densities for each strata (i.e. mean densities expected for the sample frame within a strata)
  3. Frame lengths for each strata (this is required to correct / adjust sample weights)

Important notes on sites list use
• The site list is ordered by strata and site name.
• Sites which were replaced by oversamples in the first year of the survey (2023) have been removed from the sample list.
• The panel column currently assumes a 9-year rotating panel design with annual sites, 3-year and 9-year panel rotation. For example, in a region with 30 sites the coding is as follows; 10 annual sites (to be fished each year), 10 3-year sites (panel 3.1, first year of the 3-year rotating panel) and 10 9-year sites (panel 9.1, first year of the 9-year rotating panel). This design was chosen to balance trend detection and spatial coverage consistent with the objectives of NEPS. However, the survey could be used in other ways e.g. the same sites could be fished each year to improve trend detection. Such considerations would need to be addressed in subsequent analysis.
• The number of sites that are sampled in a given year is resource dependent and may also reflect choices around panel rotations. However, it is critical that sites are sampled sequentially down the sites list to maintain the integrity of the survey. Sites cannot be “chosen” within a survey.
• Where local managers make use of the NEPS survey design it is important that meta-data are retained to document any panel rotations and over sample requirements (and reasons). This information may be important for future data analysis depending on objectives.
• Site weights should be adjusted prior to analysis (see spsurvey documentation).

doi: 
https://doi.org/10.7489/12548-1
Citation: 
F L Jackson, J Gilbey, L J B Eagle, R J Fryer and I A Malcolm (2025). National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS) 2023 Survey. DOI: 10.7489/12548-1

Data and Resources

FieldValue
Publisher
Modified
2025-07-01
Release Date
2025-07-01
Identifier
a89e02e8-7f7f-444f-9302-5630869e91c5
Spatial / Geographical Coverage Area
POLYGON ((-1.3623046875 56.158935367978, -4.21875 54.535027711199, -4.921875 54.535027711199, -9.31640625 59.052915509818, -0.703125 58.780658864201))
Temporal Coverage
2023-06-20 to 2023-10-01
Language
English (United Kingdom)
License
UK Open Government Licence (OGL)
Data Dictionary

Further details:
Michael Dumelle, Tom Kincaid, Anthony R. Olsen, Marc Weber (2023).spsurvey: Spatial Sampling Design and Analysis in R. Journal of Statistical Software, 105(3), 1-29. doi:10.18637/jss.v105.i03

The following reports provide full details on the National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS) survey design and assessment methodologies:

Jackson F.L., Gilbey J., Eagle L.J.B., Fryer R.J., Malcolm I.A. (2025). The status of juvenile Atlantic salmon and brown trout populations in Scotland’s rivers: The National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS) 2023. Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Vol 16 No 1, 107p. DOI: 10.7489/12543-1

Malcolm I.A., Jackson F.L., Millidine K.J., Bacon P.J., McCartney A.G, Fryer R.J. (2023). The National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS) 2021. Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Reports Vol 14, No 2, pp. 63 DOI: 10.7489/12435-1
Malcolm I.A., Millidine K.J, Jackson F.L, Glover R.S Fryer R.J. (2020). The National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS) 2019. Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Vol 11 No 9, 56pp. DOI: 10.7489/12321-1

Malcolm I.A. Millidine K.J., Jackson F.L., Glover R.S., Fryer, R.J. (2019) Assessing the status of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) from juvenile electrofishing data collected under the National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS). Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Vol. 10 No. 2. 74pp. DOI: 10.7489/12203-1

Use constraints and citations

The following copyright should accompany maps, predictions or data derived using the NEPS 2023 Survey information:
F L Jackson, J Gilbey, L J B Eagle, R J Fryer and I A Malcolm (2025). National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS) 2023 Survey. DOI: 10.7489/12548

The following citations should also be included in any papers, reports or web-based material using juvenile fish benchmark predictions:

Malcolm, I.A. et al. (in prep) Development of an assessment benchmark for juvenile brown trout (Salmo trutta) using juvenile electrofishing data.

Malcolm I.A., Millidine K.J., Glover R.S., Jackson F.L., Millar C.P., Fryer R.J. (2019) Development of a large-scale juvenile density model to inform the assessment and management of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) populations in Scotland. Ecological Indicators 96: 303–316 DOI: 10.1016/J.ECOLIND.2018.09.005

Contact Name
Scottish Government, Marine Directorate
Contact Email
Public Access Level
Public