Biology and population dynamics of cowcod (Sebastes levis) in the southern California Bight


Autoria(s): Butler, John L.; Jacobson, Larry D.; Barnes, J. Thomas; Moser, H. Geoffrey
Data(s)

2003

Resumo

Cowcod (Sebastes levis) is a large (100-cm-FL), long-lived (maximum observed age 55 yr) demersal rockfish taken in multispecies commercial and recreational fisheries off southern and central California. It lives at 20–500 m depth: adults (>44 cm TL) inhabit rocky areas at 90–300 m and juveniles inhabit fine sand and clay at 40–100 m. Both sexes have similar growth and maturity. Both sexes recruit to the fishery before reaching full maturity. Based on age and growth data, the natural mortality rate is about M =0.055/yr, but the estimate is uncertain. Biomass, recruitment, and mortality during 1951–98 were estimated in a delay-difference model with catch data and abundance indices. The same model gave less precise estimates for 1916–50 based on catch data and assumptions about virgin biomass and recruitment such as used in stock reduction analysis. Abundance indices, based on rare event data, included a habitat-area–weighted index of recreational catch per unit of fishing effort (CPUE index values were 0.003–0.07 fish per angler hour), a standardized index of proportion of positive tows in CalCOFI ichthyoplankton survey data (binomial errors, 0–13% positive tows/yr), and proportion of positive tows for juveniles in bottom trawl surveys (binomial errors, 0–30% positive tows/yr). Cowcod are overfished in the southern California Bight; biomass during the 1998 season was about 7% of the virgin level and recent catches have been near 20 metric tons (t)/yr. Projections based on recent recruitment levels indicate that biomass will decline at catch levels > 5 t/yr. Trend data indicate that recruitment will be poor in the near future. Recreational fishing effort in deep water has increased and has become more effective for catching cowcod. Areas with relatively high catch rates for cowcod are fewer and are farther offshore. Cowcod die after capture and cannot be released alive. Two areas recently closed to bottom fishing will help rebuild the cowcod stock.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/15122/1/05butler.pdf

Butler, John L. and Jacobson, Larry D. and Barnes, J. Thomas and Moser, H. Geoffrey (2003) Biology and population dynamics of cowcod (Sebastes levis) in the southern California Bight. Fishery Bulletin, 101(2), pp. 260-280.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/15122/

http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1012/05butler.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Biology #Fisheries
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed