A summary of the assessment and management approach applied to South African abalone (Haliotis midae) in Zones A-D
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2007
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Abstract
The management of abalone stocks worldwide is complicated by factors such as poaching
combined with the difficulties of assessing a sedentary (but not immobile) resource that is
often patchily distributed. The South African abalone Haliotis midae fishery is faced with an
additional problem in the form of a movement of rock lobsters Jasus lalandii into much of
the range of the abalone. The lobsters have dramatically reduced sea urchin Parechinus
angulosus populations, thereby indirectly negatively impacting juvenile abalone, which rely
on the urchins for shelter. The model developed for abalone is an extension of more standard
age-structured assessment models because it explicitly takes spatial effects into account,
incorporates the ecosystem change effect described above and formally estimates illegal
catches using a novel index, the Confiscations Per Unit Policing Effort (CPUPE). The model
is simultaneously fitted to CPUE and Fishery-Independent Abalone Survey (FIAS)
abundance data as well as several years of catch-at-age (cohort-sliced from catch-at-length)
data for the various components of the fishery as well as for different strata. A basic tenet of
fisheries modelling is to not go beyond the information content of the data. The model
developed involves the efficient use of data to allow a model of greater complexity (as was
essential in this instance) than usual. It has provided the basis for management advice over
recent years by projecting abundance trends under alternative future catch levels.
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Reference:
Éva E, P. 2007. A summary of the assessment and management approach applied to South African abalone (Haliotis midae) in Zones A-D. ,Faculty of Science ,Marine Resource Assessment and Management Group. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/18685 .