Comparison of life history parameters for landed and discarded fish captured off the southeastern United States


Autoria(s): Stephen, Jessica A.; Harris, Patrick J.; Reichert, Marcel J. M.
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

Commercial fisheries that are managed with minimum size limits protect small fish of all ages and may affect size-selective mortality by the differential removal of fast growing fish. This differential removal may decrease the average size at age, maturation, or sexual transition of the exploited population. When fishery-independent data are not available, a comparison of life history parameters of landed with those of discarded fish (by regulation) will indicate if differential mortality is occurring with the capture of young but large fish (fast growing phenotypes). Indications of this differential size-selective mortality would include the following: the discarded portion of the target fish would have similar age ranges but smaller sizes at age, maturation, and sexual transition as that of landed fish. We examined three species with minimum size limits but different exploitation histories. The known heavily exploited species (Rhomboplites aurorubens [vermilion snapper] and Pagrus pagrus [red porgy]) show signs of this differential mortality. Their landed catch includes many young, large fish, whereas discarded fish had a similar age range and mean ages but smaller sizes at age than the landed fish. The unknown exploited species, Mycteroperca phenax (scamp), showed no signs of differential mortality due to size-selective fishing. Landed catch consisted of old, large fish and discarded scamp had little overlap in age ranges, had significantly different mean ages, and only small differences in size at age when compared to comparable data for landed fish.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/8708/1/stephen_Fish_Bull_2011.pdf

Stephen, Jessica A. and Harris, Patrick J. and Reichert, Marcel J. M. (2011) Comparison of life history parameters for landed and discarded fish captured off the southeastern United States. Fishery Bulletin, 109(3), pp. 292-304.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/8708/

http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1093/stephen.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Biology #Ecology #Fisheries
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed