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Peterman's productivity method for estimating dynamic reference points in changing ecosystems

Authors :
Paula Silvar-Viladomiu
Cóilín Minto
Deirdre Brophy
David G Reid
Marine and Freshwater Research Centre, Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology, GMIT, Dublin Road, Galway, Ireland, H91 T8NW
Marine Institute, Rinville, Oranmore, Co., Galway, Ireland, H91 R673
This analysis was funded by the Irish Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine’s Competitive Research Funding Programmes (DAFM) as part of the FishKOSM project (Ref15/S/744).
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2022.

Abstract

Target and limit reference points are fundamental management components used to define sustainable harvest strategies. Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY) and the precautionary principle underpin many reference points. Non-proxy reference points based on MSY in age-based single-species assessments depend on the stock–recruitment (SR) relationship, which can display complex variability. Current reference points ignore persistent dynamic change by assuming that the SR relationship is stationary and with constant recruitment parameters over selected time periods. We highlight Peterman's productivity method (PPM), which is capable of tracking temporal dynamics of recruitment productivity via time-varying SR parameters. We show how temporal variability in SR parameters affects fishing mortality and biomass MSY-based reference points. Implementation of PPM allows for integrated dynamic ecosystem influences in tactical management while avoiding overwrought and sometimes ephemeral mechanistic hypotheses tested on small and variable SR datasets. While some of these arguments have been made in individual papers, in our opinion the method has not yet garnered the attention that is due to it.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6858d2a1d415798a813334073f53ca50