Using the best of two worlds: A bio-economic stock assessment (BESA) method using catch and price data

Reliable stock assessments are essential for successful and sustainable fisheries management. Advanced stock assessment methods are expensive, as they require age- or length-structured catch and detailed fishery-independent data, which prevents their widespread use, especially in developing regions....

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Published in:Fish and Fisheries
Main Authors: Lancker, Kira, Voss, Rudi, Zimmermann, Fabian, Quaas, Martin
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3069477
https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12759
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spelling ftimr:oai:imr.brage.unit.no:11250/3069477 2023-06-18T03:39:59+02:00 Using the best of two worlds: A bio-economic stock assessment (BESA) method using catch and price data Lancker, Kira Voss, Rudi Zimmermann, Fabian Quaas, Martin 2023 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3069477 https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12759 eng eng urn:issn:1467-2960 https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3069477 https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12759 cristin:2149845 Fish and Fisheries Others 2023 ftimr https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12759 2023-06-07T22:46:25Z Reliable stock assessments are essential for successful and sustainable fisheries management. Advanced stock assessment methods are expensive, as they require age- or length-structured catch and detailed fishery-independent data, which prevents their widespread use, especially in developing regions. Furthermore, modern fisheries management increasingly includes socio-economic considerations. Integrated ecological-economic advice can be provided by bio-economic models, but this requires the estimation of economic parameters. To improve accuracy of data-limited stock assessment while jointly estimating biological and economic parameters, we propose to use price data, in addition to catches, in a new bio-economic stock assessment (‘BESA’) approach for de-facto open access stocks. Price data are widely available, also in the Global South. BESA is based on a state-space approach and uncovers biomass dynamics by use of the extended Kalman filter in combination with Bayesian estimation. We show that estimates for biological and economic parameters can be obtained jointly, with reliability gains for the stock assessment from the additional information inherent in price data, compared to alternative assessment methods for data-poor stocks. In a real-world application to Barents Sea shrimp (Pandalus borealis, Pandalidae), we show that BESA benchmarks well also against advanced stock assessment results. BESA can thus be both a stand-alone approach for currently unassessed stocks as well as a complement to other available methods by providing bio-economic information for advanced fisheries management. publishedVersion Other/Unknown Material Barents Sea Pandalus borealis Institute for Marine Research: Brage IMR Barents Sea Besa ENVELOPE(12.340,12.340,64.651,64.651) Fish and Fisheries
institution Open Polar
collection Institute for Marine Research: Brage IMR
op_collection_id ftimr
language English
description Reliable stock assessments are essential for successful and sustainable fisheries management. Advanced stock assessment methods are expensive, as they require age- or length-structured catch and detailed fishery-independent data, which prevents their widespread use, especially in developing regions. Furthermore, modern fisheries management increasingly includes socio-economic considerations. Integrated ecological-economic advice can be provided by bio-economic models, but this requires the estimation of economic parameters. To improve accuracy of data-limited stock assessment while jointly estimating biological and economic parameters, we propose to use price data, in addition to catches, in a new bio-economic stock assessment (‘BESA’) approach for de-facto open access stocks. Price data are widely available, also in the Global South. BESA is based on a state-space approach and uncovers biomass dynamics by use of the extended Kalman filter in combination with Bayesian estimation. We show that estimates for biological and economic parameters can be obtained jointly, with reliability gains for the stock assessment from the additional information inherent in price data, compared to alternative assessment methods for data-poor stocks. In a real-world application to Barents Sea shrimp (Pandalus borealis, Pandalidae), we show that BESA benchmarks well also against advanced stock assessment results. BESA can thus be both a stand-alone approach for currently unassessed stocks as well as a complement to other available methods by providing bio-economic information for advanced fisheries management. publishedVersion
format Other/Unknown Material
author Lancker, Kira
Voss, Rudi
Zimmermann, Fabian
Quaas, Martin
spellingShingle Lancker, Kira
Voss, Rudi
Zimmermann, Fabian
Quaas, Martin
Using the best of two worlds: A bio-economic stock assessment (BESA) method using catch and price data
author_facet Lancker, Kira
Voss, Rudi
Zimmermann, Fabian
Quaas, Martin
author_sort Lancker, Kira
title Using the best of two worlds: A bio-economic stock assessment (BESA) method using catch and price data
title_short Using the best of two worlds: A bio-economic stock assessment (BESA) method using catch and price data
title_full Using the best of two worlds: A bio-economic stock assessment (BESA) method using catch and price data
title_fullStr Using the best of two worlds: A bio-economic stock assessment (BESA) method using catch and price data
title_full_unstemmed Using the best of two worlds: A bio-economic stock assessment (BESA) method using catch and price data
title_sort using the best of two worlds: a bio-economic stock assessment (besa) method using catch and price data
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3069477
https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12759
long_lat ENVELOPE(12.340,12.340,64.651,64.651)
geographic Barents Sea
Besa
geographic_facet Barents Sea
Besa
genre Barents Sea
Pandalus borealis
genre_facet Barents Sea
Pandalus borealis
op_source Fish and Fisheries
op_relation urn:issn:1467-2960
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3069477
https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12759
cristin:2149845
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/faf.12759
container_title Fish and Fisheries
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