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Appendix 8: ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES TO ESTIMATING THE EFFECT OF CHANGES IN MESH SIZE1

1This Appendix was prepared in FAO HQ, Rome, after the working party meeting, to illustrate the application of alternative methods of assessment. It has not been discussed by the working group as a whole.
In the report of the working party, the effects of changes in mesh size were estimated using the yield-per-recruit tabulations of Beverton and Holt (1964), for different values of the size at fish capture (C, = 1c/L¥). This approach makes use of the estimates of growth and mortality of the fish, but does not take account of possible variations in fishing mortality with age, (for fish above the selection range of the gear), or differences in the size composition between the catches of different fleets fishing the same stock. An alternative approach is that of Gulland (1961), in which the basic sets of information used are the size composition of the present catches, and estimates of the exploitation rate, E, i.e. the proportion of the fish in the sea that will ultimately be caught (= F/F + M in the case of constant mortality rates).

The importance of this to the hake fishery is shown by the differences between the sizes of hake apparently taken by Moroccan and Spanish fishermen. The greater part of the Moroccan catch is of fish less than 30 cm, which could be released by a 70 mm mesh. The fish caught by Spain are much larger, and most of the catch (at least in terms of weight) would be obtained by a 70 mm mesh. The effects of a larger mesh would therefore bear very unequally on the two fisheries, the benefits being much greater for the Spanish than for the Moroccan fishermen, and an analysis treating the fishery as a whole could be quite misleading.

The steps involved in calculating the immediate and long-term effects of a mesh-change, using the alternative method are as follows:

(i) Estimate the proportion of the present catch in each length-group which will be released if the mesh-size is increased (= P. say).

(ii) Estimate (for each section of the fishery) the numbers NR and weight YR of fish released

(NR = S Pi Ni; Y = S Pi Ni Wi),
where Ni is the number of fish caught of length i, and Wi is the average weight of fish of that size.
(iii) Calculate the total numbers released (
= S NR, summing over all sections of the fishery), and the total numbers retained = S NK, where NK = C - NR, and C is the number caught at present with the original mesh-size).

(iv) Estimate the numbers of the fish released which will ultimately be caught, taking account of (a) natural mortality between the time at release, and the time at which they will have grown big enough to be retained by the new larger mesh, and (b) the proportion of those reaching the latter size that will ultimately be caught (= E). That is, the numbers caught will be equal to NA, where

NA = E e-Mt

and

M = natural mortality coefficient


t = time between release and reaching the selection size of the larger mesh

(v) Calculate the proportion, Q, by which, in the long-run, the catches immediately after the change in mesh size, will be increased as a result of the capture of fish released by the larger mesh; this will be equal to the ratio of NA, the additional numbers caught, to , the numbers caught immediately after the change i.e.

(vi) Calculate, for each element of the fishery separately, the immediate loss jL, and the long-term effects jG

where 1-jL = jYK/j/Y

(jY = initial weight caught by the jth element of the fishery = jYK + jYR)

and 1 + jG = (1 + Q)(1 - jL)

This has been done for data for the northern (M. merluccius) fishery, treating the Spanish and Moroccan catches as two distinct elements, and for the southern fishery, treating it as a homogeneous unit, with a size composition the same as that of the Portuguese fishery. The results were. as set out below:

A. Northern Stocks (M. merluccius fishery) (Changes in percent)


 

Mesh Change from 30 mm to:

Immediate Loss

Long-Term Gain

E = .5

E = .7

E = .9

Total Fishery


 

40 mm

1.6

5.4

8.1

10.9

50 mm

8.0

16.1

25.7

35.3

60 mm

17.6

34.3

55.1

75.8

70 mm

26.9

59.5

94.1

128.7

Morocco


 

40 mm

2.6

4.3

7.1

9.8

50 mm

17.3

4.2

12.9

21.5

60 mm

40.1

-2.4

12.7

27.7

70 mm

60.8

-14.4

4.2

22.8

Spain


 

40 mm

1.0

6.0

8.8

11.6

50 mm

2.0

23.6

33.9

44.1

60 mm

3.3

57.6

82.0

106.2

70 mm

5.4

106.4

156.9

202.7


B. Southern Stocks (M. spp.)

Mesh Change from 60 mm to:

Immediate Loss

Long-Term Gain

E = .5

E = .7

E = .9

70 mm

2.3

1.8

3.5

5.2

80 mm

6.3

3.1

7.2

11.4


Too much attention should not be paid to the precise figures, which depend on the length compositions used in the calculations. The true length compositions are not well known. In terms of the total catches there will be very considerable gains in the northern area, even if the stock is moderately exploited (E = 0.5, fishing mortality is equal to natural mortality; in fact the estimates determined by the group were F = 0.6, M = 0.2, E implying E = 0.75). However the immediate loss in going in one step is high (over 25 percent), and intermediate steps would be needed.

Looking at the individual countries, Spanish catches would be increased very considerably, for all values of E, and their immediate losses are comparatively small. Moroccan fishermen would gain less, and if the rate of fishing is lower than expected, they might even lose in the long term. In any case the mesh-size that would give them the largest catch (but at the expense of reduced total catch) are less than 70 mm. These are, as underlined in the table, 40 mm if E = 0.5, 50 mm if E = 0.7 and 60 mm if E = 0.9.

Reference

Gulland, J.A., The estimation of the effect on catches of changes in gear selectivity. 1961 J. Cons. CIEM, 26(2): 204-14

Table 1: MERLUCCIUS MERLUCCIUS: CATCH (IN METRIC TONS) CATCH PER UNIT EFFORT AND TOTAL EFFORT DATA FOR THE NORTHERN ZONE OF CECAF

Year

C1

C2

C3

E1

E2

CPUE1

CPUE2

CPUE3

C1+C2+C3




1970

1 714

4 802

4 916

5 852

5 450

.29

.88

.57

11 432

39 421

12 991

20 056

1971

1 455

2 724

4 616

5 002

5 200

.29

.52

.41

8 795

30 328

16 913

21 451

1972

1 356

2 606

4 515

4 589

5 500

.30

.47

.39

8 477

28 257

18 036

21 736

1973

1 426

2 850

3 575

4 589

6 800

.31

.42

.38

7 861

25 326

18 693

20 661

1974

2 421

5 020

5 650

4 100

8 100

.64

.62

.63

13 094

20 459

16 526

20 784

1975

1 796

4 412

5 843

4 194

9 600

.44

.46

.45

12 059

27 389

22 722

26 780

1976

1 142

2 757

3 846

4 912

12 300

.23

.22

.23

7 739

33 648

35 177

33 648

C1= Spanish catches (bakas)
C2 = Moroccan catches
C3 = Spanish catches (trios)
E1 = Spanish effort (bakas) GRT
E2 = Moroccan effort GRT
CPUE1 =
CPUE2 =
CPUE3 =
Table 2: MERLUCCIUS spp.1/: CATCH (IN METRIC TONS), CATCH PER UNIT EFFORT AND TOTAL EFFORT DATA FOR THE NORTHERN ZONE OF CECAF
1/Includes small quantities of M. cadenati

Year

C1

2/C2

C3

E1

C1/E1

Total
catch

Total effort
(x 103 hours fishing)

Average effort
(3 years)

1964

6 614

n.a.

200

152.9

43.3

6 8143/

157.4

-

1965

13 075

243

800

150.8

86.7

14 118

162.8

-

1966

14 543

351

2 100

149.1

97.5

16 994

174.3

164.8

1967

14 431

175

6 700

132.4

109.0

21 306

195.5

177.5

1968

15 189

396

2 500

137.8

110.2

18 085

164.1

178.0

1969

13 871

635

3 400

137.6

100.8

17 906

177.6

179.1

1970

10 236

13 816

3 000

142.6

71.8

27 052

376.8

239.5

1971

7 809

11 742

4 800

113.9

68.6

24 351

355.0

303.3

1972

7 341

13 086

18 100

109.3

67.2

38 527

573.3

435.0

1973

9 931

23 341

68 900

106.5

93.2

102 172

1 096.3

674.9

1974

9 349

24 129

79 200

81.3

115.0

112 678

979.8

883.1

1975

4 261

27 750

67 590

78.2

54.5

99 601

1 827.5

1 301.2

1976

5 030

24 400

59 542

80.5

62.5

88 972

1 423.6

1 410.3

C1 = Portuguese catch (tons)
C2 = Spanish catches (tons)
C3 = Soviet catches (tons)
E1 = Portuguese effort (thousands of fishing hours)
C1/E1 = CPUE of the Portuguese fleet (kg/hour fishing)

2/Total catch of 1964 not available. From 1965 to 1969 - Stat. Bul. CECAF, Catches from 1973-1975 - Scientific estimations

3/Spanish catches not included.

Table 3: M. MERLUCCIUS: LENGTH COMPOSITION FROM RESEARCH TRAWL HAULS IN MOROCCAN WATERS 1973-1976, USING A COMMERCIAL SIZED MESH All zones (by depths in meters)

Table 4: M. MERLUCCIUS: ESTIMATES OF THE LENGTH COMPOSITION OF MOROCCAN AND SPANISH CATCHES, BASED ON TABLE 3 (Numbers in 000’)

cm

Morocco

Spain

Totals


6-7


143

143


8-9

62

300

362


10-11

362

956

1 318

1823

12-13

1 557

1 539

3 096


14-15

1 896

1 459

3 355


16-17

7 298

714

8 012

14463

18-19

9 575

712

10 287


20-21

8 625

333

8 958


22-23

5 310

672

5 982

25227

24-25

3 240

649

3 889


26-27

1 962

527

2 489


28-29

1 234

522

1 756

8134

30-31

600

665

1 265


32-33

539

890

1 429


34-35

361

834

1 195

3889

36-37

247

981

1 228


38-39

109

693

802


40-41

53

876

929

2959

42-43

47

796

843


44-45

23

586

609


46-47

23

396

419

1871

48-49

22

288

310


50-51

14

159

173


52-53

11

159

170

653

54-55

5

108

113


56-57

5

98

103


58-59

8

98

106

322

60-61

2

63

65


62-63

8

82

90


64-65

5

68

73

228

66-67

3

54

57


68-69

-

75

75


70-71

-

49

49

181

72-73

3

54

57


74-75

-

23

23


76-77

2

14

16

96

78-79


9

9


80-81


5

5


82-83


2

2

16

84-85


-

- )


86-87


7

7 )


88-89


35

35)

46

94-95


2

2 )


104-105


2

2 )


No.

43 211

16 697

59 908


Weight kg

4 095

5 422

9 517



Table 5: MERLUCCIUS spp.: ESTIMATES OF THE LENGTH COMPOSITION OF MERLUCCIUS spp. FOR SPANISH, PORTUGUESE AND USSR CATCHES FOR THE YEARS 1970-1976, BASED ON SAMPLES FROM PORTUGUESE VESSELS (SEE APPENDIX 4). (Nos. in 000)

Length cm

1970

1971

1972

1973

1974

1975

1976

16-17

1

0

-

-

-

-

-

18-19

27

39

2

-

731

-

-

20-21

536

200

33

-

6 107

1 271

-

22-23

1 991

966

105

164

16 499

2 442

-

24-25

5 094

1 302

221

3 876

16 307

11 787

4

26-27

7 068

2 632

503

19 590

8 275

17 245

132

28-29

9 263

4 354

1 051

26 061

7 044

17 643

849

30-31

10 056

5 798

2 317

17 268

9 186

14 728

2 829

32-33

6 832

6 483

3 462

14 301

18 475

14 528

9 675

34-35

4 856

6 841

4 369

22 426

33 794

13 382

19 501

36-37

4 566

5 588

4 446

37 153

44 546

13 706

20 746

38-39

4 804

4 577

6 354

40 187

40 864

21 680

19 369

40-41

5 280

5 158

7 587

33 168

27 520

29 455

20 407

42-43

3 993

4 661

7 609

19 119

18 488

24 945

18 917

44-45

3 021

3 165

8 041

11 684

13 561

14 503

16 238

46-47

2 014

2 229

6 144

7 545

11 598

13 058

11 995

48-49

1 433

1 660

4 363

4 084

7 813

11 837

9 128

50-51

1 089

1 466

2 511

2 343

4 375

10 118

7 073

52-53

702

985

1 200

1 445

1 925

6 753

5 149

54-55

437

672

647

865

821

3 140

3 979

56-57

236

439

525

613

475

1 620

2 339

58-59

124

262

382

503

462

573

962

60-61

89

242

276

515

346

374

792

62-63

67

120

249

263

218

299

321

64-65

37

110

77

120

154

199

321

66-67

37

116

17

11

103

50

207

68-69

25

113

66

33

90

100

75

70-71

10

87

77


38

50

75

72-73

15

84

28


38

50

38

74-75

2

29

11


38

2

38

76-77

1

32

44


26

25

19

78-79

5

6

11


13

-

-

80-81

1

3

17


-


19

82-83

2

0

-


13


-

Total number

73 763

60 420

62 745

263 340

289 945

245 564

171 196

Catch tons

23 682

23 540

37 947

101 623

112 066

99 322

88 643

g

320

390

600

390

390

400

520


Table 6: M. MERLUCCIUS: WORKSHEET FOR COHORT ANALYSIS OF LENGTH COMPOSITION

Length group (6 cm)

Catch in numbers × 103

Estimated numbers × 103

Exploitation rate E = F/Z


6-12

1823

79431

(.33)



12-18

14463

73826

.70

)


18-24

25227

53309

.85

)


24-30

8134

23722

.79

)


30-36

3889

13482

.76

)


36-42

2959

8357

.78

)


42-48

1871

4553

.81

)


48-54

653

2238

.70

)


54-60

322

1310

.64

)


60-66

228

806

.67

)


66-72

181

468

.74

)


72-78

96

223

.73

)


78-84

16

92

(.47)



84 +

46

58

(.80)




Table 7: MERLUCCIUS spp.: WORKSHEET FOR COHORT ANALYSIS OF LENGTH COMPOSITION

Length group

Average numbers (1973, 1974, 1975)

Average numbers 6 cm classes

Numbers at sea

Rate of exploitation E = F/Z

18-19

244


539 756.8


20-21

2 459




22-23

6 368

9 071


(.10)

24-25

10 657




26-27

15 037




28-29

16 916

42 610

445 230.6


30-31

13 794



.37

32-33

15 768




34-35

23 201

52 763

329 222.8


36-37

31 802



.48

38-39

34 244




40-41

30 048

96 094

219 183.8


42-43

20 851



.73

44-45

13 249




46-47

10 734

44 834

87 765.3


48-49

7 911



.75

50-51

5 612




52-53

3 374

16 897

27 965.6


54-55

1 609



.77

56-57

903




58-59

513

3 025

6 063.0


60-61

412



.69

62-63

260




64-65

158

830

1 689.6


66-67

55



.65

68-69

63




70-71

29

147

417.3


72-73

29



.50

74-75

13




76-77

17

59

124.5


78-79

4



.54

80-81

0

8

16


82-83

4





Table 8: M. MERLUCCIUS: WORKSHEET FOR YIELD PER RECRUIT CALCULATIONS-VARIATIONS IN EFFORT


Y’/R (from tables)

Y’/R (as % of E = 0.75)

E

F

a

b

c

d

a

b

c

d

.10

.02

10.7

8.6

5.9

6.0

95

97

98

64

.15

.04

14.8

12.0

8.1

8.4

131

135

135

89

.20

.05

18.2

14.6

9.9

10.4

161

164

165

111

.25

.07

20.8

16.6

11.2

11.9

184

187

187

127

.30

.09

22.7

18.1

12.1

13.1

201

203

202

139

.35

.11

23.7

18.9

12.5

13.8

210

212

208

147

.40

.13

24.1

19.1

12.7

14.3

213

215

212

152

.45

.16

23.9

18.7

12.5

14.3

212

210

208

152

.50

.20

22.8

17.9

11.9

14.1

202

201

198

150

.55

.24

21.3

16.7

11.0

13.5

188

188

183

144

.60

.30

19.3

15.1

9.9

12.8

171

170

165

136

.65

.37

17.0

13.0

8.7

11.8

150

146

145

126

.70

.47

14.2

11.1

7.4

10.6

13

125

123

113

.75

.60

11.3

8.9

6.0

9.4

100

100

100

100

.80

.80

8.5

6.8

4.6

8.1

75

76

77

86

.85

1.13

5.9

4.8

3.4

6.8

52

54

57

72

.90

1.80

3.8

3.2

2.4

5.5

34

36

40

50


Parameters values used:

M = .20

1c = 14 cm


Present value of E = 0.70

(a) M/K = 1.75 c = 0.11
(b) M/K = 2.00 c = 0.11
(c) M/K = 2.50 c = 0.11
(d) M/K = 2.50 c = 0.18
Table 9: M. MERLUCCIUS: WORKSHEET FOR YIELD PER RECRUIT CALCULATIONS - VARIATIONS IN AGE OF FIRST CAPTURE

c

1c

Mesh size

tc

Y’/R (from tables)

Y’/R in %

a

b

c

d

a

b

c

d

10

13

36

.54

8.4

10.7

5.6

11.6

79

81

77

91

12

16

44

.90

9.4

11.9

6.4

12.2

89

90

88

95

141/

18

50

1.10

10.6

13.2

7.3

12.8

100

100

100

100

16

21

58

1.40

11.8

14.6

8.3

13.4

111

111

114

105

18

23

64

1.70

13.2

16.1

9.4

14.1

125

122

129

110

20

26

72

2.00

14.5

17.7

10.4

14.7

137

134

142

115

30

39

108

3.70

22.0

26.4

16.6

17.6

208

200

227

138

40

52

144

5.60

28.9

34.9

20.4

19.0

273

264

279

148

50

65

181

7.80

33.0

40.9

21.9

18.3

311

310

300

143

58

75

208

10.00

33.7

42.3

20.5

16.1

317

320

281

126

60

78

217

10.70

32.5

42.0

19.7

15.3

307

318

270

120

70

91

253

14.30

26.7

36.8

14.3

10.5

252

279

196

82

80

104

289

19.30

16.7

25.2

7.4

5.2

158

191

101

41

90

117

325

28.00

5.7

10.1

1.8

1.2

54

77

25

9

1/Present level
Parameters values used:

M = .20

F = .60

Selection factor =3.6


Present value of c = 14

(a) E = 0.75 M/K = 2.00
(b) E = 0.75 M/K = 1.75
(c) E = 0.75 M/K = 2.50
(d) E = 0.50 M/K = 2.50
Table 10: MERLUCCIUS spp.: WORKSHEET FOR YIELD PER RECRUIT CALCULATIONS - VARIATIONS IN EFFORT

E

F

Y’/R (from tables)

Y’/R (as % of E = 0.70)

a

b

c

a

b

c

.10

.03

10.3

8.2

5.3

27

26

25

.15

.05

15.0

11.9

7.7

39

38

36

.20

.07

19.2

15.2

9.9

50

49

46

.25

.09

23.0

18.3

11.9

60

59

56

.30

.12

26.4

21.0

13.7

69

68

64

.35

1.50

29.4

23.4

15.4

77

75

72

.40

.19

32.0

25.5

16.8

84

82

79

.45

.23

34.1

27.2

18.0

89

87

85

.50

.28

35.8

28.7

19.0

94

92

89

.55

.34

37.0

29.8

19.9

97

96

93

.60

.42

37.9

30.5

20.5

99

98

96

.65

.52

38.2

31.0

21.0

100

100

99

.701/

.65

38.2

31.1

21.3

100

100

100

.75

.84

37.7

30.9

21.4

99

99

100

.80

1.12

36.9

30.5

21.4

97

98

100

.85

1.59

35.8

29.8

21.2

94

96

100

.90

2.52

34.3

28.9

20.9

90

93

98

1/Present level
Parameters values used:
M = .28
Present value of E = 0.70
(a) M/K = 1.75 c = 0.44
(b) M/K = 2.00 c = 0.44
(c) M/K = 2.50 c = 0.44
Table 11: MERLUCCIUS spp.: WORKSHEET FOR YIELD PER RECRUIT CALCULATIONS - VARIATIONS IN AGE OF FIRST CAPTURE

c

1c

Mesh size

tc

Y’/R (from tables)

Y’/R as %

a

b

c

d

a

b

c

d

10

9

25

.80

13.6

10.6

7.0

9.6

36

34

33

47

20

18

50

1.60

20.3

16.5

11.6

13.6

53

53

54

66

30

27

75

2.50

28.3

23.4

16.7

17.6

74

75

78

86

40

36

100

3.60

35.8

29.4

20.5

20.2

94

95

96

99

44

40

111

4.20

38.2

31.1

21.3

20.5

100

100

100

100

50

45

125

5.00

40.7

32.6

21.5

20.2

107

105

101

99

60

54

150

6.50

41.0

31.5

19.0

17.4

107

101

89

85

70

63

175

8.60

35.3

25.6

13.6

12.1

92

82

64

59

80

72

200

11.50

23.9

15.8

7.0

6.1

63

51

33

30

90

81

225

16.40

9.5

5.3

1.7

1.4

25

17

8

7


Parameters values used:

Present value of c = 0.44

(a) E = 0.70 M/K = 1.75
(b) E = 0.70 M/K = 2.00
(c) E = 0.70 M/K = 2.50
(d) E = 0.60 M/K = 2.50
Figure 1: ATLANTIC, EASTERN CENTRAL (Major Fishing Area 34), ATLANTIQUE, CENTRE-EST (Zone de Pêche Principale 34), ATLANTICO, CENTRO-ORIENTAL (Area de Pesca Principal 34)

Figure 2: DISTRIBUTION OF HAKES IN THE NORTHERN ZONE OF CECAF (From Bravo de Laguna, in press)

Figure 3: M. MERLUCCIUS - TOTAL CATCHES AND INDICES OF TOTAL FISHING EFFORT IN UNITS OF SPANISH “BAKAS”, MOROCCAN VESSELS AND BOTH CLASSES OF VESSELS COMBINED

Figure 4: M. MERLUCCIUS - INDICES OF ABUNDANCE BASED ON CATCHES PER UNIT EFFORT BY SPANISH “BAKAS” AND MOROCCAN VESSELS

Figure 5: MERLUCCIUS spp. - TOTAL CATCH IN NORTHERN ZONE OF CECAF AND INDEX OF TOTAL EFFORT

Figure 6: M. MERLUCCIUS - RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN YIELD PER RECRUIT AND FISHING MORTALITY RATE (F)

Figure 7: M. MERLUCCIUS - RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN YIELD PER RECRUIT, AGE AT FIRST CAPTURE (tc) AND MESH SIZE

Figure 8: MERLUCCIUS spp. - RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN YIELD PER RECRUIT AND FISHING MORTALITY RATE (F)

Figure 9: MERLUCCIUS spp. - RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN YIELD PER RECRUIT AND AGE AT FIRST CAPTURE (tc)

Figure 10: M. MERLUCCIUS - RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CATCH PER UNIT EFFORT BY SPANISH “BAKAS” AND TOTAL EFFORT IN UNITS OF MOROCCAN TRAWLERS


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