Title: Fisheries Reference Points Single and multispecies
1 Fisheries Reference Points(Single- and
multi-species)
2(Fisheries) Reference Points
-
- Quantities that provide guidelines for targets
and limits on harvesting - (are usually fishing mortality rates or
biomasses).
3Traditional Reference Points(BMSY / MSY)
- BMSY the biomass at which Maximum Sustainable
Yield, MSY, is achieved.
MSY
BMSY
4Traditional Reference Points (BMSY / MSY)
- Calculating MSY and BMSY given a biomass dynamics
model - MSY is defined as
5Yield-Per-Recruit Reference Points
Fmax
F0.1
F0.1 is defined by
6Spawner Biomass-per-Recruit Reference Points
Scaled to 100 for F0
Typical choices include 35, 40
F40
7Stock-Recruitment Relationship Reference Points
Fhigh
Fmed
Flow
8Combining 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
9Combining 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.
10Combining Yield-per-Recruit and
Stock-Recruitment-III
MSY
F0.1
BMSY
11Combining Yield-per-Recruit and
Stock-Recruitment-IV
How sensitive is the yield curve to steepness
Steepness 0.5 / 0.8 / 0.95
BMSY
12Other 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.
13Multi-species Reference Points
14Multispecies Yield-Per-Recruit-I
- Multispecies yield-per-recruit extends
single-species yield-per-recruit by linking the
fishing mortality rates for each species
15Multispecies 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?
16An Example of Multispecies Yield-per-Recruit
- Pink ling
- Slow growing (?0.14), long lived (M0.15yr-1),
domed shaped vulnerability pattern. - Spotted warehou
- Fast growing (?0.3), medium lived (M0.15yr-1),
asymptotic vulnerability ogive.
17The yield-per-Recruit Curve
18The Spawner Biomass-per-Recruit Curve
19Multispecies 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.
20Multispecies 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.
21Readings
- Clark (1991).
- Hilborn and Walters (1992) Chapter 14.
- Pikitch (1987).
- Quinn and Deriso (1999) Chapter 11.
- Sissenwine and Shepherd (1987)