Title: Lecture 8: Introduction to Stock Assessment
1Lecture 8Introduction to Stock Assessment
- WMAN 445
- Fish Management
- Lecture Notes
2Fisheries Management Approaches
- Manage Fish Populations Directly
- Stocking
- Harvest Regulations
- Size limits
- Creel limits
- Technology limits
- Limited Entry
- Seasonal Limits
- Special Reg Areas
3Fisheries Management Approaches
- Manage the Associated Community
- Food / Prey supplementation
- Control Predators / Parasites
4Fisheries Management Approaches
- Manage Habitats and Water Quality
- Habitat Improvement Structures
- Treat pollution / acid precipitation
- Bank Stabilization
- Artificial Reefs
- Limit Activities that Destroy Habitat (bottom
trawls, Dredging)
5Fisheries Management Approaches
- Manage Activities in the Watershed
- Best Management Practices for Agriculture and
Forestry - Development Planning to minimize impacts to
aquatic systems - Erosion Control
- Stormflow Control
6Fisheries Management Approaches
1
3
4
Targeted Fish Species
Aquatic Habitat and Water Quality
Watershed Processes
Aquatic Communities
2
More Sustainable
Less Sustainable
7Need for Fisheries Stock Assessments
- All fish management approaches require
quantitative information on the status of the
fishery and factors that influence, have
influenced, or are likely to influence that
status.
8Need for Fisheries Stock Assessments
- Managers must know the answer to questions such
as - What is the size of the targeted fish population?
- What is the populations age structure?
- What is the reproductive capacity of the
population? - How many fish can be harvested each year? Which
sizes should be left alone? - Which habitat or water quality conditions
influence the population? - Do interactions with other species affect the
population? - Which human activities other than fishing affect
the fishery?
9Some Important Definitions
- SPECIES a group of similar organisms that can
freely interbreed (example Coho Salmon) - POPULATION a group of individuals of the same
species that have a high probability of
interacting with each other and interbreeding
(example Upper Snake River Coho Salmon) - STOCK a harvested or managed unit of fish (may
include more than one population or species)
(example Pacific Northwest Salmon off Oregon and
Washington Coast)
10And a Couple More
- SUBSPECIES taxonomically distinct individuals
that occupy non-overlapping geographical ranges,
but share the essential characteristics of the
species such as interbreeding (example
Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout, Southern Appalachian
Brook Trout) - EVOLUTIONARILY SIGNIFICANT UNIT (ESU) a
geographically isolated portion of the species
population has high level of genetic difference
from other subpopulations of the species, but not
recognized taxonomically as a separate subspecies
or species (California Coho Salmon)
11What is a Stock Assessment?
- The use of statistical and mathematical
calculations to make quantitative predictions
about the response of fish populations to
alternative management choices (usually
alternative harvest levels).
12What is a Stock Assessment?
- Stock Assessment includes
- Estimate of current population size.
- Estimate of current harvest rate.
- Estimates of population size or harvest rates at
which the stock can be maintained over time. - Predictions of population dynamics under various
management scenarios.
13Stock Assessment vsFisheries Management
14Where does the data come from?
- Commercial and / or Recreational Fishery Catches
(Creel Surveys, Landings) - Lots of cheap data
- Biased
15Where does the data come from?
- Independent Fisheries Surveys (NOAA,
Universities, State Agencies) - Expensive data
- Unbiased
16Stock Assessment in Practice What We Measure
- Basic Population Parameters
- Fish Abundance
- Recruitment
- Fishing Mortality
- Natural Mortality
- Fishing Effort
- Surplus Production
17Stock Assessment in Practice What We Measure
- Calculated Yield Functions
- Production Function
- Long-Term Potential Yield (LTPY)
- Current Potential Yield (CPY)
- Recent Average Yield (RAY)
- Stock Level Relative to LTPY
- Status of Utilization