Publication | Open Access
Do natural mortality and availability decline with age? An alternative yield paradigm for juvenile fisheries, illustrated by the hake<i>Merluccius merluccius</i>fishery in the Mediterranean
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Citations
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References
1997
Year
Fishery AssessmentEngineeringFishery ScienceAquacultureMsvpa EstimatesAgricultural EconomicsFisheries ScienceFishery ManagementBiostatisticsOceanographyCommercial FishingAlternative Yield ParadigmMarine BiologyNatural MortalityNorth Sea StocksAvailability DeclineConservation BiologySustained Production
The paper explores the apparent contradiction between a high trawling pressure on juveniles and sustained production of hake that has occurred over the last decade in many Mediterranean fisheries. The practical consequences are followed of assuming rapid declines in natural mortality rate M in the first few years of life to a low, constant adult natural mortality, as well as the observation, for small-mesh trawl cod ends, of declining availability with age. Several approaches are proposed for fitting declining M-with-age with a reciprocal function for hake, using criteria based on mean life-time fecundity, mean age at egg production, existing estimates of adult M, and vectors based on stock productivity assumptions. All vectors of M-at-age were similar to MSVPA estimates of North Sea stocks.
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