Browsing by Subject "Patagonian toothfish"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemOpen AccessPreliminary assessment of the Falklands Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) population: Use of recruitment indices and the estimation of unreported catches(Elsevier, 2005) Payne, Adam P; Agnew, David J; Brandão, AnabelaLongline fishing for Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) has taken place in Falkland Island waters for over 10 years. This species was previously only caught as bycatch in the Loligo gahi and finfish trawl fishery. This paper presents a preliminary assessment of the Falkland Islands population of Dissostichus eleginoides using an age-structured production model (ASPM). Two models were investigated; one using a Beverton–Holt stock recruitment relationship and another using trawler CPUE based estimates of toothfish abundance to estimate yearly recruitment. A stock recruitment relationship was not included within the model that used abundance estimates, as recruitment to the population was estimated directly from the index of relative recruit abundance calculated from trawler CPUE. The model was fitted to longline standardised CPUE and to the catch-at-length data. The models produced estimates that provided similar declines in the toothfish population although the start and end biomass estimates varied slightly. The models provided estimates of between 13,000 and 26,000 tonnes of current spawning stock biomass and showed current biomass to be between 38 and 46% of virgin biomass. The fit to CPUE was poor between 1994 and 1996, which we hypothesised could have been due to unreported catches or changes in q or M. This was a time when there was considerable IUU fishing in the southwest Atlantic. When the model was allowed to estimate a level of extra catch the fit was improved and 5000 tonnes of extra catch was estimated. Two further models were briefly examined to investigate the possibility of changes in M and q but both required large changes in those parameters in order to fit. Estimates of MSY varied widely, from 912 to almost 3000 tonnes.
- ItemOpen AccessA proposed Management Procedure for the toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) resource in the Prince Edward Islands vicinity(MARAM, University of Cape Town, 2009) Brandão, Anabela; Butterworth, Doug SThe status of the toothfish resource in the Prince Edward Islands region is unclear because CPUE data suggest considerable depletion, whereas catch-at-length information indicates that past catches have had relatively little impact on abundance. A Management Procedure (MP) approach is proposed to provide a sound scientific basis to recommend future TACs in the face of this appreciable uncertainty. Four Operating Models (OMs) reflecting ‘Optimistic’, ‘Intermediate’, ‘Less Pessimistic’ and a ‘Pessimistic’ current status for the resource are developed which take account of the different selectivities of past longline and pot fisheries. These OMs are used for trials of a candidate generic MP which could provide future TAC recommendations for this resource. The MP uses two data sources: the recent trend in longline CPUE and the mean length of the catches made. An MP with control parameter values specified is proposed for implementation based on the results of the trials. Given the importance of an adequate catch rate for the economic viability of the fishery, the choice of control parameter values focused primarily on a reasonable probability of securing a catch rate increase, whatever the current resource status. MP performance is reasonably robust across a range of sensitivity tests, although it does deteriorate in conservation terms if the stock-recruitment curve steepness h is low. These tests also indicate that monitoring of future catch-at-length information would be necessary to guard against a change in selectivity towards greater catches of older fish.