Vetemaa, M., Eschbaum, R., Albert, A., Saks, L., Verliin, A., Jürgens, K., Kesler, M., Hubel, K., Hannesson, R., and Saat, T. 2010. Changes in fish stocks in an Estonian estuary: overfishing by cormorants? – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 67: 1972–1979. In Estonia, the cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis is a newcomer, and its numbers have increased rapidly since 1985. In the shallow protected (no fishery) Käina Bay in Väinameri (West Estonia), the colony was established in 1995. Gillnet sampling indicated that roach was the most abundant spawning fish species in 1995. Ten years later, when the study was repeated, the catch per unit effort was already more than 100 times lower than in 1995. The number of spawning perch decreased tenfold from 1995 to 2005. During the same period, commercial fishing effort in the entire Väinameri area decreased several times. The change in fish abundance in the Käina Bay and in the coastal fish-monitoring areas in the archipelago sea nearby, together with an analysis of food of cormorants, indicates that the decline in fish abundance might be related to the increased numbers of cormorants. The conclusion is drawn that the establishment of a cormorant colony could have seriously damaged or even prevented normal functioning of historically important spawning grounds and affected fish recruitment to adjacent areas. Therefore, expanding bird colonies might play a role similar to an expanding fishing fleet, by overexploiting the resource.