Browsing by Subject "M. capensis"
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- ItemOpen AccessAge-reading error matrices for Merluccius paradoxus and M. capensis(2009) Rademeyer, Rebecca AThe revised methodology for hake assessments currently under development requires inputs on the relative biases amongst different readers of hake ages from otoliths, and the extent of variability of these readings. This document details the methodology applied to determine these ageing error matrices.
- ItemRestrictedDetailed methodology and results for the final reference set of the South African Merluccius paradoxus and M. capensis resources for use in OMP testing(2006) Rademeyer, Rebecca A; Butterworth, Doug SThis document gives detailed methodology, data and results for the final Reference Set for the joint assessment of the South African M. paradoxus and M. capensis resources that will be used in OMP testing.
- ItemOpen AccessMerluccius paradoxus and M. capensis length frequency distributions from Nansen surveys(2006) Rademeyer, Rebecca A; Butterworth, Doug SA strong argument for the single M. paradoxus stock hypothesis (Burmeister, 2005) is that the major (perhaps effectively the only) spawning ground for the species is on the Agulhas Bank slope. Linked to this, one might then expect greater proportions of smaller M. paradoxus closer to this region, and Burmeister (2005, Fig. 2) shows plots that seemingly corroborate this, reflecting mean lengths of M. paradoxus collected on research survey that generally increase with movement from the Agulhas Bank north-westwards to the Kunene river (Namibian-Angolan border).
- ItemRestrictedProposed update of the proposed revised reference set for the joint assessment of the South African Merluccius paradoxus and M. capensis resources for use in OMP testing(2006) Rademeyer, Rebecca A; Butterworth, Doug SThe plus-group for M. paradoxus and M. capensis in the joint assessment of these resources has been extended to age 15 (from 5+ for M. paradoxus and 7+ for M. capensis). Some results are presented for a subset of the proposed set of scenarios to be included in a revised Reference Set, that would then be used in subsequent OMP testing.
- ItemOpen AccessResults from sensitivity tests related to the models used to standardize the offshore commercial trawl CPUE data of M. capensis and M. paradoxus respectively(2009) Glazer, Jean Patricia; Butterworth, Doug SGeneral Linear Models (GLMs) are applied to the catch per unit effort (CPUE) data from each of the two hake stocks, Merluccius capensis and M. paradoxus, in order to derive standardized indices of abundance which are then input into the stock assessment models and the Operational Management Procedure (OMP). Since it is difficult to distinguish between the two hake species at the landing site catches are reported for both species combined. An algorithm that makes use of size and depth information is thus used to split the catches into the two species (Gaylard and Bergh, 2004). In recent years, for various reasons, a large proportion of the drag records do not have the catches reported by size rendering them unusable; hence an extensive exercise was undertaken to allow for the inclusion of these data in the analyses (Fairweather et al, 2009). The results reported here are for various sensitivities related to GLM3 of Fairweather et al (2009). This is the version of the data that corrects for the errors encountered in the historic extracts used previously, and also includes those data that were previously excluded given that size information was not reported. A procedure was applied to interpolate the size information from data for which there is size information within a given cell which, for each year, is defined by a depth range, latitude range (for the West Coast) or longitude range (for the South Coast), and quarter (Jan-Mar, Apr-Jun, July-Sept and Oct-Dec).
- ItemOpen AccessWhy does the current hake assessment indicate the extent of depletion of the M. paradoxus population to be high, but that of M. capensis to be much less?(2008) Rademeyer, Rebecca A; Butterworth, Doug SThe relatively high extent of depletion estimated for the M. paradoxus population is found to be robustly determined, with all five sources of data contributing to the assessment suggesting that both this extent and current fishing mortality are relatively high. However these fives sources lead to appreciably differently perceptions for the extent of depletion of the M capensis population. The GLMstandardised CPUE series commencing in 1978 is found to be the most influential of the five in leading to present estimates of both a relatively low extent of depletion and fishing mortality for this population. However if there is a trend in bias over time in this index as a measure of abundance, irrespective (almost) of the direction of this bias, the extent of depletion of the M. capensis population would be estimated to be notably higher. Research priorities indicated by this analysis are a focus on ageing and sex-differentiation for M. paradoxus, and on the possibility that factors responsible for an increase in catching efficiency may have been omitted from the M. capensis CPUE GLM standardisation.