1 / 19

Using Climate Information in Fisheries Stock Assessments (with a focus on Pacific Whiting)

Using Climate Information in Fisheries Stock Assessments (with a focus on Pacific Whiting). Ian Taylor SMA 550: Climate Impacts on the Pacific Northwest. Outline. Stock Assessment Background Example Species: Pacific Whiting 1999 Pacific Whiting Stock Assessment Climate Impacts

flavio
Download Presentation

Using Climate Information in Fisheries Stock Assessments (with a focus on Pacific Whiting)

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. Using Climate Information in Fisheries Stock Assessments (with a focus on Pacific Whiting) Ian Taylor SMA 550: Climate Impacts on the Pacific Northwest

  2. Outline • Stock Assessment Background • Example Species: Pacific Whiting • 1999 Pacific Whiting Stock Assessment • Climate Impacts • Incorporating Climate Information into Stock Assessments

  3. Stock Assessment Background • Sustainable Fisheries Act mandates the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) to provide the best available scientific information on which to base management decisions about U.S. fisheries. • NMFS provides this information in the form of Stock Assessments • Assessments are presented to the Pacific Fisheries Management Council

  4. Stock Assessment Background • Basis for determining catch limits as well as evaluating the success of previous management techniques • Use increasingly complex models • Incorporate data from: • surveys (trawls, acoustic, etc.) • commercial catches • biological information • climate measurements and predictions?

  5. Stock Assessment Background • Basis for determining catch limits as well as evaluating the success of previous management techniques • Use increasingly complex models • Incorporate data from: • surveys (trawls, acoustic, etc.) • commercial catches • biological information • climate measurements and predictions?

  6. Stock Assessment Background • Status of 82 West Coast groundfish species (relative to target abundance in 1998) • above 4 • near 6 • below 1 • overfished 5 • ??? 66

  7. Stock Assessment Background • Status of 82 West Coast groundfish species (relative to target abundance in 1998) • above 4 • near 6  Pacific Whiting • below 1 • overfished 5 • ??? 66

  8. Example Species: Pacific Whiting

  9. Example Species: Pacific Whiting • Mostly made into surimi (Krab) • Caught in midwater trawls off West Coast of U.S. and Canada • Allowable Biological Catch (ABC) was 300,000 metric tons in 1998 • U.S. lands 80% of ABC • Canada lands 30% of ABC • Spawns in relatively warm water (California?) • Adults migrate to colder water (WA/BC)

  10. Example Species: Pacific Whiting

  11. 1999 Pacific Whiting Stock Assessment • Single coastal stock • Age structured model • Data included: • Total catch from US and Canadian fisheries • U.S. acoustic/midwater trawl survey • U.S. bottom trawl survey • Canadian acoustic survey • Larval rockfish survey

  12. 1999 Pacific Whiting Stock Assessment • Single coastal stock • Age structured model • Data included: CV • Total catch from US and Canadian fisheries 0.05 • U.S. acoustic/midwater trawl survey 0.10 • U.S. bottom trawl survey 100 • Canadian acoustic survey 100 • Larval rockfish survey 10

  13. 1999 Pacific Whiting Stock Assessment • Single coastal stock • Age structured model • Data included: CV • Total catch from US and Canadian fisheries 0.05 • U.S. acoustic/midwater trawl survey 0.10 • U.S. bottom trawl survey 100 • Canadian acoustic survey 100 • Larval rockfish survey 10 All considered to be independent

  14. 1999 Pacific Whiting Stock Assessment • Projections are extremely uncertain due to unpredictable recruitment • Projections do not include the potential for spatial changes in the population

  15. Climate Impacts

  16. Climate Impacts • “During El Niños a larger proportion of the stock migrates into Canadian waters.” • NMFS • “Large changes in coastal ocean conditions in the past few years have had big ecosystem impacts” • Nate Mantua • Age 1 and 2 fish were relatively small in 1998

  17. Incorporating Climate Information into Stock Assessments • Don’t throw away data—use more • Quantify change in distribution due to ENSO/PDO • Adjust surveys based on this information • Improve survey accuracy • Survey where the fish are • Include climate data in spawner-recruit relationships

  18. Incorporating Climate Information into Stock Assessments • Include climate forecasts in short-term projections • Multiple long-term projections based on alternative climate scenarios FOR MANAGERS: • Does it make sense to have constant catch rates in the U.S. and Canada?

More Related