Management of Fluctuating Fish Stocks: The Case of Pacific Whiting
Abstract
All commercially valuable fish stocks fluctuate annually and this leads
to challenges for fishery management. The biomass of Pacific whiting (Meluccius
productus) is subject to large fluctuations owing to the highly variable
nature of recruitment. A stochastic population dynamics model which includes
multiple fishery sectors and a hockey stick stock–recruitment relationship
tailored to generate occasional extremely strong year-classes is developed.
Simulation is then used to evaluate the performance of various harvest
strategies in terms of average catch, variation in catch, the probability
of closing the fishery, and a variety of other conservation-related performance
measures. The simulations account for the error and imprecision associated
with estimating biomass from stock assessments. Most of the harvest strategies
are based on constant escapement. The “best performing” of
the harvest strategies involves closing the fishery only when the biomass
is estimated to be below 5% of its pre-fishery size and in which catches
increased fairly slowing with increasing biomass.
Source: Ishimura, G., Punt, A.E., and D.D. Huppert. 2005. “Management
of fluctuating fish stocks: the case of Pacific whiting.” Fisheries
Research, 73: 201-216.
For more information, please contact: Mark.Plummer@noaa.gov
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