Minimalistic surveys clear the way for priorities in the ecosystem approach

Standardized surveys are an integral part of most fish stock assessments. Ship time is expensive and new demands set by the ecosystem approach challenge present survey and sampling strategies with respect to coverage of all components of an ecosystem. Surveys are normally designed to cover the stock...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Godø, Olav Rune, Hjellvik, Vidar, Tjøstheim, Dag, Korsbrekke, Knut
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: ICES 2009
Subjects:
cod
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/102952
Description
Summary:Standardized surveys are an integral part of most fish stock assessments. Ship time is expensive and new demands set by the ecosystem approach challenge present survey and sampling strategies with respect to coverage of all components of an ecosystem. Surveys are normally designed to cover the stock distribution and to estimate relative abundance with acceptable precision. Taking ecosystem considerations means more attention to non-commercial species and ecosystem processes including predator – prey interaction and biophysical interactions. In this paper we explore alternative use of survey effort based on data from the Barents Sea winter survey. Will a drastic reduction of survey effort reduce its consistency and will consistency change with sampling strategies? We explore the efficiency of combining minimalistic surveys with standard hydrographical sections. We analyse data of cod which is the main target species of our survey. Precision of abundance indices is reduced roughly according to reduced number of hauls. Observed trends in population abundance and overall mortality appear to be similar and so are also the variability bands around the average cohort trend. But the minimalistic surveys are more susceptible to year to year variability. There are systematic bias effects related to both age and mortality which are independent of effort and design and this represents a larger problem then sampling variability. A distribution of trawls along hydrographical sections reflects the standard survey well. We suggest that a reduced survey, e.g. carried out along hydrographical transects every second year, might clear capacity for essential ecosystem investigations including studies of unresolved year effects in surveys otherwise not funded. Keywords: Survey strategy, bottom trawl survey, reduced effort, cod