1 / 21

Fisheries Reference Points (Single- and multi-species)

Fisheries Reference Points (Single- and multi-species). Fish 458, Lecture 23. (Fisheries) Reference Points. Quantities that provide guidelines for targets and limits on harvesting (are usually fishing mortality rates or biomasses). Traditional Reference Points ( B MSY / MSY ).

connor
Télécharger la présentation

Fisheries Reference Points (Single- and multi-species)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fisheries Reference Points(Single- and multi-species) Fish 458, Lecture 23

  2. (Fisheries) Reference Points Quantities that provide guidelines for targets and limits on harvesting (are usually fishing mortality rates or biomasses).

  3. Traditional Reference Points(BMSY / MSY) • BMSY – the biomass at which Maximum Sustainable Yield, MSY, is achieved. MSY BMSY

  4. Traditional Reference Points (BMSY / MSY) • Calculating MSY and BMSY given a biomass dynamics model: • MSY is defined as:

  5. Yield-Per-Recruit Reference Points Fmax F0.1 F0.1 is defined by:

  6. Spawner Biomass-per-Recruit Reference Points Scaled to 100% for F=0 Typical choices include: 35%, 40% F40%

  7. Stock-Recruitment Relationship Reference Points Fhigh Fmed Flow

  8. Combining Yield-per-Recruit and Stock-Recruitment-I • Spawner biomass, S, = Spawner biomass per recruit multiplied by recruitment, R: • Substitute into a Beverton-Holt stock recruitment relationship: or

  9. Combining Yield-per-Recruit and Stock-Recruitment-II • To calculate a yield vs. spawner biomass plot: • Set the exploitation rate to 0 • Calculate the yield-per-recruit and the spawner biomass-per-recruit as a function of exploitation rate • Compute recruitment given spawner biomass-per-recruit and the stock-recruitment relationship. • Multiply yield-per-recruit and spawner biomass-per-recruit by recruitment to calculate yield and spawner biomass. • Increase the exploitation rate and repeat steps 2-4.

  10. Combining Yield-per-Recruit and Stock-Recruitment-III MSY F0.1 BMSY

  11. Combining Yield-per-Recruit and Stock-Recruitment-IV How sensitive is the yield curve to steepness Steepness = 0.5 / 0.8 / 0.95 BMSY

  12. Other Biomass Reference Levels • 20% B0 – when selecting policies consider the probability of dropping below 20% B0 (a “level one does not go below”). • An example: Accept no policy that has a greater than 10% probability of dropping below 20% B0 over a 20-year projection period. • Problems with approaches based on a fixed proportion of B0: arbitrary, too cautious for some species, not cautious enough for other species.

  13. Multi-species Reference Points

  14. Multispecies Yield-Per-Recruit-I • Multispecies yield-per-recruit extends single-species yield-per-recruit by linking the fishing mortality rates for each species:

  15. Multispecies Yield-Per-Recruit-II • Notes: • The species are independent, except through the impact of fishing. • We have adopted a continuous formulation here rather a discrete formulation – why?

  16. An Example of Multispecies Yield-per-Recruit • Pink ling • Slow growing (=0.14), long lived (M=0.15yr-1), domed shaped vulnerability pattern. • Spotted warehou • Fast growing (=0.3), medium lived (M=0.15yr-1), asymptotic vulnerability ogive.

  17. The yield-per-Recruit Curve

  18. The Spawner Biomass-per-Recruit Curve

  19. Multispecies Yield-per-recruit(Advantages and Disadvantages) • Disadvantages: • It is often very difficult to estimate the catchability coefficients. • A value-per-recruit analysis may be more appropriate but that requires specifying the relative size of the recruitment of each species. • Discarding is ignored – this is, however, often an important aspect of technological interactions. • No account is taken of the impact of reduction of spawner biomass on recruitment.

  20. Multispecies Yield-per-recruit(Advantages and Disadvantages) • Advantages: • It allow us to predict the overall consequences of changes in fishing effort in terms of yield- and spawner biomass-per-recruit. • The approach can be extended to handle discarding and the stock-recruitment relationship.

  21. Readings • Clark (1991). • Hilborn and Walters (1992); Chapter 14. • Pikitch (1987). • Quinn and Deriso (1999); Chapter 11. • Sissenwine and Shepherd (1987)

More Related