Anchovy
Anchovies are small, schooling forage fishes belonging to the family Engraulidae within the order Clupeiformes, characterized by slender bodies, large mouths with overhanging snouts, and a maximum length of about 50 cm, though most species are under 15 cm.[1][2] They primarily inhabit marine and brackish waters in temperate and tropical regions worldwide, forming dense surface schools and feeding mainly by filtering zooplankton, with some species piscivorous.[1][3] As key prey in marine food webs, anchovies support populations of larger predators including fish, seabirds, and marine mammals, while their populations exhibit high variability driven by environmental factors like temperature and upwelling.[4][5] Commercially, anchovies underpin significant global fisheries, with the Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) representing the largest single-species catch, primarily processed into fishmeal and oil for aquaculture feed and agriculture, contributing substantially to economic value despite debates over direct human consumption versus industrial uses.[6][7] In human diets, they are valued for their pungent flavor when salted, cured, or canned, serving as staples in Mediterranean and Asian cuisines for sauces, pizzas, and snacks, and offering nutritional benefits including high protein (around 20 g per 100 g), omega-3 fatty acids, calcium, and vitamin B3, though raw consumption carries parasitic risks and processed forms are sodium-dense.[8][9][10] Fishery management challenges arise from their boom-bust cycles, influenced by events like El Niño, prompting quota systems and ecosystem-based assessments to sustain yields.[2][11]Taxonomy and Phylogeny
Classification and Etymology
Anchovies belong to the family Engraulidae, a group of small, herring-like forage fishes within the order Clupeiformes, class Actinopterygii, phylum Chordata, and kingdom Animalia.[2][12] The family is distinguished from the related herring family Clupeidae by features such as a larger mouth with the maxilla extending well beyond the eye, a protruding conical snout, and typically more slender bodies.[13][14] The Engraulidae encompass 18 genera and 181 species as cataloged in comprehensive fish databases, though estimates vary slightly across taxonomic revisions, with some sources reporting 16 genera and 139–172 species due to ongoing descriptions and reclassifications.[1][15][16] Most species inhabit marine or brackish waters, with a few adapted to freshwater environments, and they are globally distributed in tropical to temperate regions.[13] The English word "anchovy" entered usage around 1582, borrowed from Spanish anchoa or Portuguese anchova, which trace to Genoese Ligurian anciôa or related Corsican forms like anchjuva.[17][18] The ultimate etymological origin remains uncertain, with proposed roots including Latin apua (a small fish), possibly from Greek aphyē (a type of small fish), or Basque anchu (dried fish), reflecting historical Mediterranean fishing and preservation practices.[19][20]Evolutionary History
Anchovies belong to the family Engraulidae within the order Clupeiformes, a clade of primarily marine fishes that also includes herrings and sardines, with molecular evidence supporting the monophyly of Clupeiformes as part of the superorder Otocephala.[21] Phylogenetic analyses using whole mitogenome sequences place Engraulidae as a distinct family, often sister to clupeoid groups, with internal divisions into subfamilies such as Engraulinae (true anchovies) and Coiliinae (tropical anchovies).[22] Updated classifications based on exon-capture phylogenomics recognize Engraulidae alongside families like Denticipitidae and Spratelloididae, reflecting ancient divergences estimated around 10-20 million years ago for crown-group Engraulidae, though earlier stem lineages may extend further back.[23][24] The fossil record of Engraulidae is sparse, likely due to the small size and delicate morphology of these fishes, which preserve poorly unless in exceptional Lagerstätten deposits. The earliest known record is an Eocene species, †Eoengraulis fasolii, from the Monte Bolca lagerstätte in Italy, dating to approximately 50 million years ago during the early Lutetian stage.[25] This taxon exhibits diagnostic engraulid traits, such as an elongate body and specialized jaw structures, indicating that the family had already diversified by the mid-Paleogene, contemporaneous with the radiation of modern clupeiform lineages following the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction. Subsequent fossils from the Miocene and later epochs document increased diversity, aligning with molecular estimates of biome conservatism where anchovies predominantly retained coastal-marine habits rather than invading freshwater realms extensively.[26] Molecular phylogenies reveal patterns of diversification driven by vicariance and adaptation to planktivorous niches, with New World anchovies showing conservatism in subtropical to temperate marine biomes.[26] Studies of mitochondrial genomes from diverse species, including those around China, confirm deep splits between genera like Engraulis and Coilia, supporting a Gondwanan or Tethyan origin for the family prior to global oceanic reconfiguration.[3] Overall, Engraulidae's evolutionary success stems from efficient filter-feeding adaptations inherited from clupeiform ancestors, enabling rapid population dynamics in productive coastal ecosystems despite limited morphological innovation since the Eocene.[24]Physical Characteristics
Morphology and Anatomy
Anchovies of the family Engraulidae exhibit a fusiform, slightly compressed body shape optimized for schooling and swift locomotion, with standard lengths typically ranging from 8 to 15 cm, though some species reach up to 30 cm.[27] The body cross-section is oval, and the belly is rounded with a series of scutes in most Old World species, absent in New World forms except for a single pelvic scute.[1] Scales are cycloid and deciduous, contributing to the translucent appearance of the body.[1] The head features a pointed snout extending beyond the lower jaw, a large inferior mouth with the maxilla's blunt tip reaching near the preoperculum's anterior margin, and numerous long gill rakers—often exceeding 20 on the lower limb—facilitating filter-feeding on plankton.[28] [29] Eyes are moderately large, and the operculum lacks spines. Coloration includes an iridescent bluish-green dorsum fading to silvery sides with a longitudinal silver stripe from the caudal peduncle to the operculum, providing camouflage in open water.[30] Fins consist of a short-based dorsal fin originating midway along the body, an anal fin of similar structure positioned posteriorly, low-placed pectoral fins, and a forked caudal fin; pelvic fins are abdominal.[28] Internally, the skeleton is ossified with a prominent swim bladder for buoyancy control, and the gut is elongated to process small particulate food.[31] Sexual dimorphism is subtle, with females often slightly larger than males in maturity.[31]Physiological Adaptations
Anchovies possess specialized visual systems adapted for their schooling and planktivorous lifestyle. In Japanese anchovies (Engraulis japonicus), the retina exhibits intraretinal variability in cone photoreceptors, with elongated cones in dorsal regions enhancing sensitivity to downwelling light for prey detection, while ventral cones optimize contrast against the brighter sky.[32] This cone specialization supports high-acuity vision during diurnal foraging, correlating with early sensory development in larvae that enables predator avoidance and active feeding shortly after hatching.[33][34] The lateral line system, inner ear, olfactory epithelium, and taste buds in E. japonicus are morphologically refined for detecting hydrodynamic disturbances, sound vibrations, chemical cues from plankton, and dissolved amino acids, respectively, facilitating coordinated schooling and rapid responses to environmental changes.[33] These sensory modalities integrate to support high-speed evasion tactics, with lateral line neuromasts densely distributed for fine-scale flow perception during dense aggregations.[35] Respiratory physiology enables tolerance to hypoxic conditions prevalent in stratified coastal waters. Unlike sardines, anchovies (Engraulis spp.) exhibit enhanced performance under low dissolved oxygen, with behavioral avoidance and physiological resilience allowing persistence in oxygen minima zones where competitors falter; for instance, bay anchovies (Anchoa mitchilli) maintain elevated swimming speeds in hypoxic estuaries despite limited prey.[36][37] Egg and larval stages show vulnerability, with 50% mortality at 2.8 mg/L O₂ over 12 hours, but juveniles and adults leverage gill ventilation adjustments for survival.[38] Metabolic adaptations underpin rapid growth and high fecundity. Japanese anchovies display elevated routine metabolic rates, measured via respirometry as increasing with body size and peaking during active phases, supporting planktotrophic demands in variable oxygen regimes.[39] In European anchovies (Engraulis encrasicolus), clinal mitochondrial DNA variation correlates with thermal gradients, enabling efficient oxidative phosphorylation and enzymatic adjustments to temperature fluctuations across latitudinal ranges.[40] Lateral musculature features slow oxidative fibers with dense vascularization, optimizing sustained swimming efficiency in aerobic conditions.[41]Distribution and Habitat
Global Range
The family Engraulidae, comprising anchovies, exhibits a cosmopolitan distribution across marine environments worldwide, with over 140 species in 17 genera primarily inhabiting coastal and pelagic zones of tropical and temperate oceans.[13] These fish are recorded in the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans, as well as the Mediterranean and Black Seas, but are generally absent from polar regions.[42] Anchovies occupy latitudes roughly between 60°N and 50°S, favoring warmer waters where they form dense schools near the surface in neritic habitats.[13] While predominantly marine, certain species tolerate brackish estuaries or even freshwater rivers, extending their presence into inland systems in regions like Southeast Asia and Africa.[43] Key commercial species illustrate this breadth: the Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) dominates the southeastern Pacific off South America, the European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) spans the northeastern Atlantic and Mediterranean, and the northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax) occurs along the eastern Pacific from British Columbia to Baja California.[2][44] This global range aligns with areas of high productivity, such as upwelling zones off Peru, California, and northwest Africa, where nutrient-rich currents support abundant plankton populations essential for anchovy foraging.[43] Distributions can shift with environmental changes, including temperature fluctuations, influencing stock abundances in regions like the Bay of Biscay or the Humboldt Current system.[45]Environmental Requirements
Anchovies, primarily species in the genus Engraulis, inhabit coastal and shelf waters characterized by moderate temperatures, typical marine salinities, and sufficient dissolved oxygen to support their pelagic lifestyle, though tolerances vary by species and life stage. The European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) prefers sea surface temperatures of 17.0–23.0°C for spawning, with juveniles showing growth acceleration up to around 20–25°C in productive coastal zones.[46][47] Similarly, the Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) thrives in upwelling-driven waters ranging from 14.5–25.0°C, where warmer surface layers during non-upwelling periods influence horizontal migrations.[48] Northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax) distributions align with cooler profiles around 10.4°C, reflecting adaptations to temperate Pacific shelves.[49] Across species, anchovies exhibit eurythermal flexibility but experience recruitment declines during extremes, such as El Niño events elevating temperatures beyond 25°C in the Humboldt Current.[50] Salinity requirements center on marine levels of 33.9–35.3 PSU, with anchovies rarely venturing into hypersaline or freshwater conditions despite occasional brackish tolerance in bays.[49][48] They occupy the upper water column, typically from the surface to 180 m depth, with eggs buoyant in the top 50 m and adults schooling at 80–120 m in stratified layers to optimize foraging and predator avoidance.[51][52] Vertical distribution responds to thermoclines, concentrating in oxygen-replete layers above hypoxic zones below 50 m in oxygen minimum areas.[50] Dissolved oxygen levels above 1 ml L⁻¹ support anchovy persistence, as they tolerate relative hypoxia better than competitors like sardines, enabling exploitation of upwelling fronts where low-oxygen waters coexist with nutrient pulses.[36][45] However, prolonged exposure to concentrations below this threshold, common in deoxygenated subsurface layers during stratification, restricts habitat and correlates with population fluctuations.[53] These requirements underscore anchovies' reliance on dynamic, oxygen-variable coastal ecosystems, where deviations driven by climate variability—such as warming-induced deoxygenation—can compress viable habitats.[54]Life History and Behavior
Reproduction and Development
Anchovies are multiple batch spawners, releasing several clutches of eggs over an extended season that varies by species and region, typically peaking during warmer months when water temperatures exceed 10–15°C.[55][56] For the European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus), spawning occurs from April to November in temperate Atlantic and Mediterranean waters, with eggs hatching in 24–65 hours depending on temperature.[57] Sexual maturity is reached at lengths of 8–12 cm, often within the first year of life, enabling rapid population turnover despite high natural mortality.[58] Fecundity estimates range from 3,000 to 20,000 eggs per batch, with total annual output influenced by female size and condition; indeterminate spawning allows adjustment to environmental cues like temperature and prey availability.[59][60] Eggs are pelagic and buoyant, remaining in the upper 50 m of the water column where they are subject to advection by currents, predation, and temperature-driven development rates.[57] Hatching yields yolk-sac larvae that transition to exogenous feeding within days, relying on microzooplankton; survival hinges on matching hatch timing with prey blooms, as mismatches can lead to starvation.[61] Larval growth is rapid, with increments of 0.2–0.5 mm per day under optimal conditions (15–20°C), but varies spatially due to upwelling and transport dynamics.[62] Metamorphosis to juveniles occurs at 20–30 mm standard length, after 20–40 days post-hatch, marking the shift to schooling behavior and nearshore habitats.[63] Early life stages exhibit high variability in abundance and condition, with cohort success linked to hydrographic retention rather than absolute spawning output.[56][64]Feeding Ecology
Anchovies primarily consume zooplankton, with copepods forming the dominant prey item across species and regions, comprising up to 62% of diet occurrence frequency in studies of Engraulis encrasicolus along the Moroccan Atlantic coast.[65] Other crustaceans, such as euphausiids and larval forms, along with occasional fish eggs, larvae, or polychaetes, supplement the diet, while phytoplankton like diatoms contributes variably, particularly as a carbon source in species such as the Peruvian anchoveta Engraulis ringens.[66] Diet composition shifts ontogenetically, with juveniles favoring smaller plankton via filter feeding and adults exhibiting greater selectivity for larger prey exceeding 1.5 mm.[67] Feeding occurs through a combination of filter and raptorial mechanisms facilitated by specialized gill rakers, which form a sieve-like structure to retain particles while water passes for respiration; smaller anchovies (<12 cm) rely more on continuous filtering, whereas larger individuals (>13 cm) switch to particulate capture for macrozooplankton.[67][68] In ram filter feeding, anchovies swim with mouths agape, directing water over extended gill rakers to trap suspended prey, with prey retention efficiency depending on particle size relative to raker spacing.[68] Daily ration typically reaches 3-4% of body weight, concentrated during daylight hours below the thermocline, with peaks in the afternoon and negligible nocturnal activity in E. encrasicolus.[67] Prey selectivity favors calanoid copepods and euphausiids over smaller or less nutritious items, influenced by availability and environmental factors like upwelling-driven plankton blooms, though feeding intensity varies seasonally and regionally—e.g., higher vacuity indices (empty stomachs) in areas with lower zooplankton density.[69][65] In non-upwelling systems, such as coastal lagoons, E. encrasicolus maintains zooplanktivory but adapts to diel prey migrations, consuming mysids or fish larvae when copepod abundance declines.[70] Trophic flexibility, including shifts toward macrozooplankton during larval stages, links to population booms when shorter food chains enhance survival efficiency.[71]Migration and Schooling
Anchovies, members of the family Engraulidae, are highly gregarious pelagic fishes that form large, tightly packed schools numbering in the tens of thousands, primarily for antipredator defense and enhanced foraging efficiency on patchy zooplankton prey.[2][72] These schools typically aggregate near the ocean surface in coastal waters, with individuals maintaining coordinated swimming through visual cues and rapid information transfer, as observed in three-dimensional acoustic studies of avoidance responses to predators like sea lions.[73] Schooling behavior exhibits diel vertical migration patterns, dispersing at night to reduce predation risk and reform during daylight for group attacks on prey patches, consistent with observations in the California Current system.[74] Migration in anchovies is predominantly seasonal and environmentally driven, responding to temperature gradients, upwelling intensity, and spawning requirements rather than fixed long-distance routes. Northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax) along the North American west coast display latitudinal shifts, with larger, older adults migrating northward and offshore in warmer years, while cooler conditions restrict distributions southward.[75] European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) in the Bay of Biscay undertake overwintering migrations to warmer southern grounds in fall, followed by northward movements in spring-summer tied to spawning, as evidenced by acoustic surveys tracking fishery shifts from southern to northern areas.[76][77] In upwelling-dominated systems, such as off Peru, anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) shoals migrate inshore during summer for concentrated feeding on nutrient-rich waters and disperse to deeper offshore areas in winter, correlating with prey availability and local hydrodynamics.[78] Estuarine species like bay anchovy (Anchoa mitchilli) show tidal and seasonal incursions into marshes, peaking in May and August for recruitment, before emigrating to coastal zones.[79] These patterns underscore anchovies' sensitivity to oceanographic variability, with larval and juvenile stages often initiating schooling and migration earlier in development to exploit ephemeral food resources.[80]Ecological Role
Trophic Interactions
Anchovies function as mid-trophic level planktivores in marine food webs, primarily consuming zooplankton such as copepods and cladocerans, which they capture through filter-feeding or selective particulate feeding.[81] [82] Larval anchovies initially feed on phytoplankton before shifting to zooplankton around 4 mm in length, with calanoid copepodites forming a key prey for larger juveniles and adults; this ontogenetic diet shift supports rapid growth but renders populations sensitive to plankton availability.[71] [83] Adults occasionally supplement their diet with larval fishes or arrowworms, enhancing energy transfer from primary producers to higher levels, though copepods dominate intake across species like the European (Engraulis encrasicolus) and northern (Engraulis mordax) anchovy.[82] [84] As abundant forage fish, anchovies serve as critical prey for diverse predators spanning multiple trophic levels, channeling planktonic production into piscivorous fish, seabirds, and marine mammals.[85] In coastal ecosystems, they support piscivores like hake (Merluccius merluccius), megrim (Lepidorhynchus whiffiagonis), salmon, tuna, and snook, with juveniles particularly vulnerable to demersal predators due to size-specific capture risks.[86] [87] Seabirds and marine mammals, including sea lions, whales, and cetaceans, rely heavily on anchovy schools for foraging, with predator success tied to anchovy abundance indices that reflect ecosystem health.[88] [89] In upwelling systems like the Humboldt Current, Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) underpin predator-prey dynamics for over 50 species, where fluctuations in anchovy biomass directly influence predator foraging efficiency and reproductive success.[90] These interactions underscore anchovies' role in stabilizing energy flow, though overexploitation can cascade to predator declines by disrupting trophic linkages.[91]Population Dynamics and Fluctuations
Anchovy populations exhibit pronounced fluctuations driven primarily by environmental variability, including ocean temperature shifts and upwelling intensity, which influence recruitment success and survival rates. These small pelagic fish have short lifespans, typically 1-3 years, and high fecundity, but their abundance is highly sensitive to larval survival, which depends on plankton availability and hydrographic conditions. In the California Current, northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax) populations have undergone boom-bust cycles, with a recent collapse to below 20,000 metric tons following peaks in the early 2010s, linked to alterations in larval food chain length and oceanographic anomalies.[92] [93] Similarly, Pacific-wide synchrony in anchovy fluctuations has been observed, correlating with large-scale climate indices like the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.[94] The Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) exemplifies extreme variability, with biomass recovering to 12.5 million metric tons within four years after the strong 1957-1958 El Niño event, only to plummet during subsequent warm phases due to disrupted upwelling, reduced plankton biomass, and habitat compression. El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events trigger high mortality by altering ocean stratification and nutrient availability, leading to fishery closures when stocks drop below sustainable levels; for instance, the 1972-1973 and 1982-1983 events caused near-total collapses. Acoustic surveys indicate biomass estimates fluctuating from under 1 million tons during El Niño lows to over 10 million tons in favorable non-ENSO years, underscoring the role of interannual climate forcing over fishing pressure in dominant dynamics.[95] [96] [97] In the Atlantic and Mediterranean, European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) populations show fluctuations tied to temperature and fishing, with an expansion in the North Sea since the mid-1990s attributed to warming waters and favorable recruitment, increasing spatial occupation despite variable yields. Climate-driven changes, such as a projected 0.8°C temperature drop potentially reducing population growth rate by 15%, highlight vulnerability to cooling scenarios, while overfishing exacerbates declines in overexploited stocks. Alternating abundance regimes with sardines in upwelling systems further illustrate climate-mediated predator-prey or competitive interactions governing low-frequency variability.[98] [99] [100]Commercial Exploitation
Key Species and Production
The Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) dominates global anchovy production, with catches primarily from Peru's northern-central and southern stocks used for industrial processing into fishmeal and oil.[101] In 2023, E. ringens accounted for approximately 45% of total anchovy landings worldwide.[102] Peru's fisheries authority set a total allowable catch of 3 million metric tons for the northern-central stock in the April 2024 to March 2025 season, reflecting biomass assessments influenced by environmental factors like upwelling and El Niño oscillations.[103] Other commercially important species include the European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus), harvested via purse seine in the Mediterranean, Black Sea, and eastern Atlantic, where annual global captures have historically exceeded 700,000 tonnes but remain subject to stock fluctuations from overfishing and climate variability.[29] The Northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax), targeted off California and Baja California, yielded U.S. commercial landings of 7 million pounds (3,175 metric tonnes) in 2023, mainly for bait and reduction.[2] The Japanese anchovy (Engraulis japonicus) supports fisheries in the Northwest Pacific, with production volumes declining from peaks over 300,000 tonnes in the 1980s due to shifting prey availability and fishing pressure.[104] Global anchovy capture production totaled 5.3 million tonnes in 2023, down 9% from 2014 levels, driven largely by variability in Peruvian stocks responsive to oceanographic conditions rather than solely harvest rates.[102] Production emphasizes sustainability through quota systems and acoustic surveys for biomass estimation, though E. ringens catches can surge to over 10 million tonnes in high-biomass years, as seen pre-1970s El Niño collapses.[105]Fisheries Methods and Yields
Purse seine nets are the predominant gear in anchovy fisheries worldwide, exploiting the species' tendency to form dense schools detectable by echosounders or aerial spotters, with the net encircling and closing like a drawstring to trap the fish.[106] This method minimizes bottom contact and bycatch relative to demersal trawls, though mid-water pair trawls are used in regions like the Adriatic Sea for smaller-scale operations.[107] In the Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) fishery, industrial purse seiners dominate, comprising over 98% of landings directed to fishmeal and oil processing plants located along the coast.[108] Bycatch remains low in these operations, primarily consisting of incidental small pelagics, with regulatory monitoring emphasizing gear selectivity.[109] The Peruvian anchoveta fishery represents the largest volume capture fishery globally, accounting for approximately 10% of total marine wild catch in peak years, though yields fluctuate markedly due to environmental factors like El Niño-Southern Oscillation events that disrupt upwelling and plankton productivity.[110] Historical peaks reached 12.3 million tonnes in 1970, contrasting with collapses to 23,000 tonnes in 1984 following overexploitation and climatic stress.[111] More recent data from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) show variability: 4.31 million tonnes in 2015, 3.19 million tonnes in 2016, 3.92 million tonnes in 2017, and 7.04 million tonnes in 2018, with quotas set biannually based on acoustic surveys and egg production estimates to maintain biomass above sustainable thresholds.[101] Other anchovy fisheries yield far less; the European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) fishery, primarily in the Mediterranean and Black Seas using purse seines, produced 282,000 tonnes in 2014, rising to 441,000 tonnes in 2015 before stabilizing around 300,000-400,000 tonnes annually amid stock assessments targeting maximum sustainable yield.[29] In North America, northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax) captures are minor, mainly for bait, with U.S. West Coast yields under 50,000 tonnes yearly and focused on sustainable management under NOAA oversight.[2] Globally, total anchovy capture hovers between 5-8 million tonnes, dominated by Peru (75% of national fish production), underscoring the sector's reliance on upwelling-driven abundance rather than technological intensification.[112]Regional Variations
The Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) fishery in the southeast Pacific, centered off Peru and northern Chile, dominates global anchovy production, accounting for the majority of the world's supply with landings exceeding 4.8 million metric tons in 2024 across two seasons in the north-central stock alone.[113] [114] This industrial-scale operation relies on purse seine vessels targeting dense schools in upwelling zones, with over 98 percent of the catch processed into fishmeal and fish oil for aquaculture and animal feed, while a small artisanal fleet (less than 2 percent) supplies direct human consumption markets.[106] Quotas are set biannually based on acoustic surveys and egg production methods, with closures enforced during El Niño events to mitigate biomass fluctuations, as seen in reduced quotas during low-productivity periods like 2023. In the Mediterranean and Black Seas, the European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) fishery yields approximately 300,000 to 400,000 metric tons annually, with the Black Sea contributing the bulk (e.g., 342,000 metric tons in 2021, declining to around 126,000 metric tons in 2022 due to environmental pressures and quotas).[115] [116] Purse seining predominates, but unlike in Peru, a larger share—often over 50 percent—goes to human consumption via canning, salting, and fresh sales, supporting coastal economies in countries like Turkey, Italy, and Tunisia.[117] Management involves total allowable catches under EU and GFCM frameworks, with reductions (e.g., 5 percent for anchovy in 2023) to address overfishing in subregions like the Adriatic, though invasive species and warming waters introduce variability.[118] Off California in the northeastern Pacific, the northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax) fishery is far smaller, with commercial landings of about 3,175 metric tons (7 million pounds) in 2023, valued at roughly $600,000.[2] Primarily harvested via purse seines and round-haul gear, the catch serves mainly as live and frozen bait for recreational fisheries targeting species like tuna and rockfish, with minor portions for direct human consumption (e.g., salted or canned) and limited reduction to meal.[119] Managed under the U.S. Pacific Fishery Management Council's Coastal Pelagic Species plan, it emphasizes monitoring abundance indices rather than strict quotas, reflecting stable but fluctuating stocks influenced by upwelling cycles, with historical peaks post-sardine collapse in the 1940s.[120]Human Uses and Economic Value
Culinary and Direct Consumption
Anchovies are typically preserved through salting, oil-packing, or canning to extend shelf life and intensify their umami flavor, as fresh specimens spoil rapidly due to high fat content and small size.[121] After filleting to remove bones and skin, they are layered in salt for curing or packed in olive oil, a process originating in Mediterranean traditions that dates back to ancient Roman production of garum, a fermented sauce primarily from anchovies.[121][122] These methods preserve nutritional value while mitigating the fish's naturally pungent taste, making them suitable for direct human consumption rather than solely industrial use.[123] In direct consumption, preserved anchovies serve as appetizers or snacks, often rinsed of excess salt before eating whole or in fillets; marinated white anchovies, known as boquerones en vinagre in Spain, are soaked in vinegar and herbs for a milder, fresh-like profile enjoyed on bread or in salads.[124] Canned varieties in oil or tomato sauce are common globally, with European producers like those in Italy and France exporting millions of tons annually for table use.[125] Fresh anchovies, when available in coastal fisheries, are grilled, fried, or eaten raw in dishes like Italian alici crudi, prized for their delicate texture in regions such as Sicily and the Black Sea coast.[126] Culinary applications emphasize anchovies as a flavor enhancer rather than a main protein, melted into sauces, pestos, or dressings to impart savory depth without fishy dominance; classic examples include Worcestershire sauce (derived from fermented anchovy pastes), Caesar dressing, and Piedmontese bagna cauda dip.[127][123] In pizza toppings, such as Neapolitan varieties, they add brininess balanced by cheese and tomatoes.[128] Italian colatura di alici, a concentrated extract from salted anchovies pressed in wooden vats, functions as a modern garum analog drizzled over pasta or vegetables, reflecting centuries-old preservation techniques refined in Cetara since the 4th century BCE.[126] Globally, consumption patterns show higher direct use in Europe (e.g., 20-30% of European anchovy catch for human food) compared to Pacific stocks like Peruvian anchoveta, where most goes to meal but boutique fresh markets emerge.[129]Industrial Applications
The majority of anchovy catch, especially Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens), is directed toward industrial processing into fishmeal and fish oil, which together constitute high-protein feed ingredients for aquaculture, livestock, and other applications. Globally, approximately 87% of fishmeal and 74% of fish oil production is utilized in aquafeeds for species like salmon and shrimp, with fishmeal also allocated to pig (7%) and poultry feeds.[130] In 2024, worldwide fishmeal output rose 26% and fish oil 12% year-over-year, driven primarily by Peru's anchoveta fishery, which harvested 2.5 million metric tons in just 40 days during its successful northern season.[131] Peru alone accounts for about one-third of global fishmeal and fish oil supply, exporting over 1 million tonnes of fishmeal annually from anchoveta, valued at roughly US$2.5 billion and representing 2% of the nation's GDP.[132][133] Fish oil extraction from anchovies yields omega-3 rich products for aquaculture nutrition and human supplements, while the defatted solids are dried and ground into fishmeal containing 65-72% protein for animal feeds.[134] Processing waste from these operations, including heads, viscera, and trimmings, is repurposed into organic fertilizers; for instance, "AnchoisFert"—a milled residue from anchovy leftovers post-limonene oil extraction—serves as a nutrient-dense amendment for crops, enhancing soil fertility without synthetic inputs.[135] Such byproducts underscore the value chain's efficiency, converting low-value forage fish into essential inputs for global protein production, though reliance on fluctuating anchovy stocks introduces supply volatility.[136]Market Trends and Trade
Peruvian anchoveta dominates global anchovy trade, primarily as raw material for fishmeal and fish oil exported to aquaculture producers in China and Southeast Asia. In 2024, Peru's anchovy catches totaled 4.85 million metric tons, driving a 26 percent increase in worldwide fishmeal production compared to 2023, with cumulative output rising 23 percent in the first nine months alone. This surge followed successful fishing seasons, including quotas exceeding 2.5 million tons in northern-central stocks, though trade volumes fluctuate with biomass assessments and El Niño impacts on availability.[114] [137] [138] For direct human consumption, preserved anchovies (canned or jarred) form a smaller but stable trade segment, with Spain and Peru as top exporters at $62.5 million and $47.8 million in value for 2023, respectively. Peru directs preserved exports mainly to Spain ($X million), the United States, and Germany, while the European Union imported $205.5 million worth (19.4 million kg) of prepared anchovies that year, sourced largely from Morocco and intra-EU flows. European anchovy catches, focused on Engraulis encrasicolus, reached 98,237 tonnes in 2023, predominantly from Spain, supporting regional canning industries but with extra-EU imports of 32,113 tonnes in 2024.[139] [140] [141] Price trends reflect supply dynamics: Peruvian fishmeal spot prices peaked at $2,370 per metric ton in late 2024 before declining 14.6 percent year-on-year by December, averaging $1,722 per ton in July 2025 amid abundant catches reducing scarcity premiums. Global preserved anchovy export prices rose modestly to $11,943 per ton in 2024, up 3 percent from prior years, buoyed by demand for premium products. Aquaculture expansion sustains long-term trade growth, projecting the anchovy fish market to expand at a 5.5 percent CAGR to $3.8 billion by 2033, though regulatory quotas and environmental variability introduce volatility.[142] [143] [144][145] [146]Nutrition and Health Implications
Nutritional Profile
Anchovies provide a nutrient-dense profile characterized by high protein content and significant levels of omega-3 fatty acids, with low carbohydrate levels. Per 100 grams of raw anchovy (Engraulis spp.), the composition includes approximately 131 kilocalories, 20.35 grams of protein, 4.84 grams of total fat, and negligible carbohydrates at 0 grams.[147][10] The fat fraction is predominantly unsaturated, featuring eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) as key long-chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, totaling around 1.64 grams per 100 grams.[148]| Nutrient | Amount per 100g (raw) | % Daily Value (approximate) |
|---|---|---|
| Protein | 20.35 g | 41% |
| Total Fat | 4.84 g | 6% |
| Omega-3 Fatty Acids (EPA + DHA) | ~1.4–1.6 g | Varies (supports heart health per dietary guidelines) |
| Vitamin B3 (Niacin) | 14 mg | 88% |
| Calcium | 147 mg | 15% |
| Selenium | 36.5 µg | 66% |
| Vitamin B12 | 0.9 µg | 38% |
Health Benefits
Anchovies are a nutrient-dense source of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, including eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), which observational and interventional studies link to cardiovascular protection by lowering plasma triglycerides, resting heart rate, blood pressure, and inflammation markers.[152][153] Regular consumption of fatty fish like anchovies aligns with American Heart Association guidelines recommending at least two servings per week to reduce coronary heart disease risk, with supportive evidence from cohort studies showing inverse associations between fish-derived EPA/DHA intake and cardiovascular events.[154][155] These omega-3s also contribute to brain health by supporting neuronal membrane integrity and reducing neuroinflammation, with anchovies providing bioavailable DHA essential for cognitive function and potentially mitigating age-related decline, as evidenced in epidemiological data on seafood consumption.[153] Anchovies further supply selenium, a trace mineral with antioxidant properties that neutralizes free radicals and supports thyroid hormone metabolism, correlating in population studies with lower risks of certain cancers and improved immune response.[150] As small pelagic fish, anchovies offer high-quality protein (approximately 20-25 grams per 100 grams serving) and vitamin D, aiding muscle maintenance and bone mineralization, respectively, while their low trophic level results in minimal bioaccumulation of contaminants like mercury compared to larger predatory fish.[150][156] Edible bones in processed forms enhance calcium intake, supporting skeletal health without the risks associated with higher-mercury species.[157]Potential Risks
Individuals with fish allergies may experience adverse reactions to anchovies, including hives, swelling, gastrointestinal distress, or anaphylaxis, as anchovies contain proteins like parvalbumin that trigger IgE-mediated responses in sensitized persons. Allergic reactions occur in approximately 0.2-0.4% of the general population, with higher prevalence among those with other seafood allergies. Canned or salted anchovies often contain high levels of sodium, with a typical 28-gram serving providing 1,400-2,000 milligrams, exceeding half the recommended daily intake of 2,300 milligrams for adults, potentially elevating blood pressure and cardiovascular risk in susceptible individuals.[8] Those with hypertension or on low-sodium diets should consume them sparingly or rinse to reduce salt content.[158] Anchovies are rich in purines, with raw varieties containing about 411 milligrams per 100 grams and canned around 321 milligrams, which can increase uric acid levels and precipitate gout flares in predisposed individuals by promoting monosodium urate crystal formation in joints.[159] Gout patients are advised to limit high-purine seafood like anchovies, sardines, and shellfish to avoid acute attacks, as purine metabolism yields uric acid that exceeds renal excretion capacity in hyperuricemic states.[160] Improperly handled anchovies risk bacterial growth leading to histamine accumulation, causing scombroid poisoning characterized by flushing, headache, and nausea within minutes to hours of ingestion, though cases are rarer than with larger pelagic fish due to anchovies' smaller size and processing. Freezing or cooking mitigates this, as histamine forms post-harvest from histidine decarboxylation by bacteria like Morganella morganii.[161] Raw or undercooked anchovies may harbor nematode parasites such as Anisakis simplex, potentially causing anisakiasis with symptoms of abdominal pain, nausea, and allergic responses upon larval migration into gastrointestinal tissues; incidence is low in commercially processed products but higher in fresh, uninspected catches.[162] Adequate freezing at -20°C for 24-72 hours or cooking destroys viable larvae, per FDA guidelines. Mercury levels in anchovies average 0.016 parts per million, well below the FDA's 1.0 ppm action level, posing negligible neurotoxic risk even with frequent consumption, unlike in larger predatory fish.[163] Other heavy metals like chromium or perfluoroalkyl substances appear in trace amounts in some samples but rarely exceed safety thresholds in monitored fisheries.Sustainability and Challenges
Stock Assessments and Overfishing
Stock assessments for anchovy populations primarily rely on hydroacoustic surveys, egg and larval production methods, and age-structured or biomass dynamic models to estimate spawning stock biomass (SSB), recruitment, and fishing mortality rates. These approaches account for the species' short life spans, high fecundity, and sensitivity to environmental variability, which can mask overfishing signals in catch data alone. Official bodies such as Peru's Instituto del Mar del Perú (IMARPE), the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) conduct annual or biennial evaluations, setting quotas based on reference points like biomass at maximum sustainable yield (Bmsy) and limits for overfishing (Fmsy).[164][165] The Peruvian anchoveta (Engraulis ringens) northern-central stock, supporting the world's largest monospecific fishery with historical peaks over 10 million metric tons annually, undergoes IMARPE's hydroacoustic cruises to derive biomass estimates and recommended exploitation rates below 0.35. In April 2025, IMARPE's assessment led to a 3 million tonne quota for the first season, reflecting sufficient biomass recovery post-2023 El Niño impacts, with mid-2024 landings indicating positive trends for sustained production.[166][165][110] However, stochastic surplus production models applied to the same stock in 2024 suggest variability, with exploitation occasionally pushing toward overfished thresholds during low-recruitment years, though current indicators place biomass above collapse risks.[167] Historical overfishing contributed to 1970s collapses, where unchecked harvests amid oceanographic shifts reduced catches from 13 million tonnes in 1970 to under 5 million by 1973, underscoring causal interplay between fishing pressure and climate-driven recruitment failures.[45] For the European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) in the Bay of Biscay (ICES Subarea 8), 2024 ICES assessments using egg production and coupled models reported SSB exceeding both the biological limit reference point (Blim) and precautionary approach point (Bpa), confirming the stock is not overfished.[168] The BIOMAN'2024 acoustic survey estimated adult biomass at 143,000 tonnes, surpassing historical averages and supporting ICES advice for 2025 catches up to 30,663 tonnes under the EU management plan.[169][170] Fishing mortality has remained below Fmsy since recovery from early 2000s overfishing, when SSB fell below Blim prompting zero TACs in 2005 and 2010, though models indicate environmental drivers like temperature often dominate abundance fluctuations over harvest levels.[171][45] The northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax) central stock off California, assessed by NOAA in 2022—the first formal update since 1995—shows no overfishing based on 2023 catch data against an overfishing limit of 8,312 metric tons for 2024-2025, with acoustic-trawl surveys indicating abundant populations amid recent recruitment booms from 2014-2019.[2][172] The northern subpopulation, lacking formal assessment, is deemed healthy via fishery-independent indices, though ecosystem shifts have elevated anchovy dominance in coastal food webs, potentially signaling broader pelagic imbalances rather than stock depletion.[2][5] In southern stocks like Chile's north-central anchovy, 2024 evaluations estimate a 100% probability of overexploitation relative to Bmsy but biomass slightly above reference levels, prompting cautious quotas.[173] Across assessed anchovy fisheries, current statuses lean healthy under management, but vulnerability to rapid environmental changes necessitates conservative harvest controls to avert overfishing during downturns.| Major Anchovy Stock | Assessment Body | Current Status | Reference Year | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peruvian Anchoveta (Northern-Central) | IMARPE | Not overfished; biomass supports 3M t quota | 2025 | [166] |
| European Anchovy (Bay of Biscay) | ICES | SSB > Blim/Bpa; not overfished | 2024 | [168] |
| Northern Anchovy (Central, California) | NOAA | Not subject to overfishing | 2023 | [2] |
| Chilean Anchovy (North-Central) | Local assessments | Overexploited probability 100%, but > Bmsy | 2024 | [173] |