Exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the Aleutian Islands

An alternate management system is introduced which uses seasonal and spatially explicit multi-species quotas generated from small-scale cooperative fishery acoustic surveys to manage the Aleutian Islands walleye pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus) fishery while limiting impacts on the endangered Western s...

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Main Authors: Barbeaux, Steven, Fritz, Lowell, Logerwell, Elizabeth
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://osf.io/download/5a6a0fa5630114000eb156b4/
id ftrepec:oai:RePEc:osf:marxiv:m2hr6
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:osf:marxiv:m2hr6 2024-04-14T08:20:54+00:00 Exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the Aleutian Islands Barbeaux, Steven Fritz, Lowell Logerwell, Elizabeth https://osf.io/download/5a6a0fa5630114000eb156b4/ unknown https://osf.io/download/5a6a0fa5630114000eb156b4/ preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:32:25Z An alternate management system is introduced which uses seasonal and spatially explicit multi-species quotas generated from small-scale cooperative fishery acoustic surveys to manage the Aleutian Islands walleye pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus) fishery while limiting impacts on the endangered Western stock of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus). This is a novel collaboration among scientists, industry, and Alaska Natives considering a cooperative management approach. The proposed system integrates the catch monitoring and accounting systems already in place in the federal groundfish fisheries off Alaska with cooperative acoustic survey biomass estimates to facilitate more refined spatial and temporal fishery management decisions. Conditions were examined under which such a system could operate successfully and results from field work conducted to assess technical requirements were discussed. During field trials biomass estimates from each survey were produced within 24-h of survey completion. This suggests spatial abundance estimates can be available in a timely manner for managing local fisheries. The proposed management system was found feasible and relatively easy to initiate because of highly motivated and cooperative industry partners, a well-established mechanism for setting allowable catch limits, and a robust catch accounting system already in place. In addition, high quality commercial echosounders required for this system are currently used by industry and, with proper controls on calibration and survey design, produce biomass estimates of sufficient quality. The application of this approach beyond this case study is also discussed for managing fisheries worldwide where fine temporal and spatial scale management could benefit the conservation of other protected species. Report Alaska Aleutian Islands RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description An alternate management system is introduced which uses seasonal and spatially explicit multi-species quotas generated from small-scale cooperative fishery acoustic surveys to manage the Aleutian Islands walleye pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus) fishery while limiting impacts on the endangered Western stock of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus). This is a novel collaboration among scientists, industry, and Alaska Natives considering a cooperative management approach. The proposed system integrates the catch monitoring and accounting systems already in place in the federal groundfish fisheries off Alaska with cooperative acoustic survey biomass estimates to facilitate more refined spatial and temporal fishery management decisions. Conditions were examined under which such a system could operate successfully and results from field work conducted to assess technical requirements were discussed. During field trials biomass estimates from each survey were produced within 24-h of survey completion. This suggests spatial abundance estimates can be available in a timely manner for managing local fisheries. The proposed management system was found feasible and relatively easy to initiate because of highly motivated and cooperative industry partners, a well-established mechanism for setting allowable catch limits, and a robust catch accounting system already in place. In addition, high quality commercial echosounders required for this system are currently used by industry and, with proper controls on calibration and survey design, produce biomass estimates of sufficient quality. The application of this approach beyond this case study is also discussed for managing fisheries worldwide where fine temporal and spatial scale management could benefit the conservation of other protected species.
format Report
author Barbeaux, Steven
Fritz, Lowell
Logerwell, Elizabeth
spellingShingle Barbeaux, Steven
Fritz, Lowell
Logerwell, Elizabeth
Exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the Aleutian Islands
author_facet Barbeaux, Steven
Fritz, Lowell
Logerwell, Elizabeth
author_sort Barbeaux, Steven
title Exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the Aleutian Islands
title_short Exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the Aleutian Islands
title_full Exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the Aleutian Islands
title_fullStr Exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the Aleutian Islands
title_full_unstemmed Exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the Aleutian Islands
title_sort exploring local fishery management through cooperative acoustic surveys in the aleutian islands
url https://osf.io/download/5a6a0fa5630114000eb156b4/
genre Alaska
Aleutian Islands
genre_facet Alaska
Aleutian Islands
op_relation https://osf.io/download/5a6a0fa5630114000eb156b4/
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