Fishery stock assessment models connect ecosystem data to quantitative fishery management. Control rules that calculate annual catch limits and targets from stock assessment results are a common component of US Fishery Management Plans. Ideally, the outcome of such control rules are updated annually on the basis of stock assessment forecasts to track fluctuations in stock abundance. When the stock assessment — fishery management enterprise achieves this level of throughput, they truly are operational models, much as the complex physical models used to routinely update climate forecasts. In reality, many contemporary assessments are closer to an individual scientific investigation than to an operational model. As a result, the review of each stock assessment is extensive and the lag between data acquisition and quota adjustment may extend to several years. If the future stock assessment process is to move towards an operational status, there will need to be changes in three aspects of the process. First, key data streams will themselves need to be made more operational and corporate so that relevant data are immediately available and trusted. Second, stock assessment models need to be made more capable of including diverse relevant data and comprehensively calculating levels of uncertainty, while also being more completely tested, documented, and standardized. The class of models called integrated analysis has these characteristics and is described here, with emphasis on the features of the Stock Synthesis model. Areas of future model development, especially to include more ecosystem and environmental factors, are explored. Third, increased throughput of assessment updates will require streamlining of the extensive review process now routinely required before stock assessment results can serve as the scientific basis for fishery management. Emphasizing review of broadly applicable assessment data and methods, rather than each final result, is a logical step in this streamlining, while maintaining public trust in the final results.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Bence, James R. and M. J. Wilberg. 2006. Performance of time-varying catchability estimators in statistical catch-at-age analysis. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 63: 2275–2285.
Bobko, S. J. and S. A. Berkeley. 2004. Maturity, ovarian cycle, fecundity, and age-specific parturition of black rockfish (Sebastes melanops). Fishery Bulletin 102: 418–429.
Brodziak, J., P. Rago, and R. Conser. 1998. A general approach for making short-term stochastic projections from an age-structured fisheries assessment model. In F. Funk, T. Quinn II, J. Heifetz, J. Ianelli, J. Powers, J. Schweigert, P. Sullivan, and C.-I. Zhang (Eds.), Proceedings of the International Symposium on Fishery Stock Assessment Models for the 21st century. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK.
Brown, S. K., M. Shivlani, D. Die, D. B. Sampson, and T. A. Ting. 2006. The Center for Independent Experts: The National External Peer Review Program of NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service. Fisheries 31 (12): 590–600.
Butterworth, D. S. and M. O. Bergh. 1993. The development of a management procedure for the South African anchovy resource, pp. 83–99. In S. J. Smith, J. J. Hunt, and D. Rivard (Eds.), Risk Evaluation and Biological Reference Points for Fisheries Management. Canadian Special Publications in Fisheries and Aquatic Science 120.
Chen, Y., M. Kanaiwa, and C. Wilson. 2005. Developing a Bayesian stock assessment framework for the American lobster fishery in the Gulf of Maine. New Zealand Journal of Freshwater and Marine Sciences 39: 645–660.
Field, J. C., A. E. Punt, R. D. Methot, and C. J. Thomson. 2006. Does MPA mean ‘Major Problem for Assessments’? Considering the consequences of place-based management systems. Fish and Fisheries 7: 284–302.
Fournier, D. A. and C. P. Archibald. 1982. A general theory for analyzing catch at age data. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 39: 1195–1207.
Francis, R. I. C. C., R. J. Hurst, and J. A. Renwick. 2003. Quantifying annual variation in catch-ability for commercial and research fishing. Fishery Bulletin 101: 293–304.
Goodyear, C. P. 1984. Analysis of potential yield per recruit for striped bass produced in Chesapeake Bay. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 4: 488–496.
Helser, T., A. E. Punt and R. D. Methot. 2004. A generalized linear mixed model analysis of a multi-vessel fishery resource survey. Fisheries Research 70: 251–264.
Hilborn, R. 2003. The state of the art in stock assessment: where we are and where we are going. Scientia Marina 67 (Suppl 1): 15–20.
Hjort, J. 1914. Fluctuations in the great fisheries of northern Europe viewed in the light of biological research. Rapports et Proces-Verbaux des Réunions du Conseil Permanent International pour l'Exploration de la Mer 20: 1–228.
Holland, D. S. 2002. Integrating marine protected areas into models for fishery assessment and management. Natural Resource Modeling 15: 369–386.
Kimura, D. K. and J. J. Lyons. 1991. Between-reader bias and variability in the age-determination process. Fishery Bulletin 89: 3–60.
Kristensen, K., P. Lewy, and J. E. Beyer. 2005. Maximum likelihood estimation in a size-spectra model. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 99: 1–10.
Livingston, P. A. and R. D. Methot. 1998. Incorporation of predation into a population assessment model of eastern Bering Sea walleye pollock. In F. Funk, T. J. Quinn II, J. Heifetz, J. N. Ianelli, J. E. Powers, J. F. Schweigert, P. J. Sullivan, and C.-I. Zhang (Eds.), Fishery Stock Assessment Models.. Alaska Sea Grant AK-SG-98-01. University of Alaska Fairbanks 1037 p.
Mace, P. M., N. W. Bartoo, A. B. Hollowed, P. Kleiber, R. D. Methot, S. A. Murawski, J. E. Powers, and G. P. Scott. 2001. National Marine Fisheries Service Stock Assessment Improvement Plan. Report of the NMFS National Task Force for Improving Fish Stock Assessments. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-F/SPO-56. 76 pp.
Maunder, M. N. and A. E. Punt. 2004. Standardizing catch and effort data: a review of recent approaches. Fisheries Research 70: 141–159.
Maunder, M. N. and G. M. Watters. 2003. A general framework for integrating environmental time series into stock assessment models: model description, simulation testing, and example. Fishery Bulletin 101: 89–99.
Maunder, M. N., S. J. Harley, and J. Hampton. 2006. Including parameter uncertainty in forward projections of computationally intensive statistical population dynamic models. ICES Journal of Marine Science 63: 969–979.
Maunder M. N., J. T. Schnute, and J. Ianelli. 2009. Computers in Fisheries Population Dynamics. In B. Megrey and E. Moksness (eds.), Computers in Fisheries Research. Kluwer Academic Publishers. p 337–372. ISBN: 978-1-4020-8635-9.
McAllister, M. K., E. K. Pikitch, A. E. Punt, and R. Hilborn. 1994. A Bayesian approach to stock assessment and harvest decisions using the sampling/importance resampling algorithm. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 51: 2673–2687.
Methot, R. D. 1989. Synthetic estimates of historical abundance and mortality for northern anchovy. American Fisheries Society Symposium 6: 66–82.
Methot, R. D. 2000. Technical Description of the Stock Synthesis Assessment Program. National Marine Fisheries Service, Seattle, WA. NOAA Tech Memo. NMFS-NWFSC-43: 46 p.
Millar, R. B. and R. D. Methot. 2002. Age-structured meta-analysis of the U.S. West Coast rockfish (Scorpaenidae) populations and hierarchical modeling of trawl survey catchabilities. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 59: 383–392.
National Research Council (NRC). 1998. Improving Fish Stock Assessments. National Academy Press, Washington, DC. 177 pp.
NOAA. 1996. Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act. NOAA. Technical Memorandum NMFS-F/SPO-23. Silver Spring, MD.
Otter Research Ltd. 2005. An introduction to AD Model Builder Version 7.1.1 for use in nonlinear modeling and statistics. Sidney, BC, Canada. (http://admb-project.org/ )
Patterson, K., R. Cook, C. Darby, S. Gavaris, L. Kell, P. Lewy, B. Mesnil, A. E. Punt, V. Restrepo, D. W. Skagen, and G. Stefansson. 2001. Estimating uncertainty in fish stock assessment and forecasting. Fish and Fisheries 2: 125–157.
Pope, J. 1972. An investigation of the accuracy of Virtual Population Analysis using cohort analysis. ICNAF Research Bulletin 9: 65–74. Also available in D. H. Cushing (Ed.). 1983. Key Papers on Fish Populations. IRL Press, Oxford. 405 p.
Prager, M. H., J. F. O'Brien, and S. B. Saila. 1987. Using lifetime fecundity to compare management strategies: a case history for striped bass. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 7: 403–409.
Prager, M. H., C. E. Porch, K. W. Shertzer, and J. F. Caddy. 2003. Targets and limits for management of fisheries: a simple probability-based approach. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 23: 349–361.
Punt, A. E. and R. D. Methot. 2004. Effects of marine protected areas on the assessment of marine fisheries. American Fisheries Society Symposium 42: 133–154.
Punt, A. E., F. Pribac, T. I. Walker, B. L. Taylor, and J. D. Prince. 2000. Stock assessment of school shark, Galeorhinus galeus, based on a spatially explicit population dynamics model. Marine and Freshwater Research 51: 205–220.
Punt, A. E., D. C. Smith, G. N. Tuck, and R. D. Methot. 2006. Including discard data in fisheries stock assessments: Two case studies from south-eastern Australia. Fisheries Research 79: 239–250.
Quinn, T. J. I. 2003. Ruminations on the development and future of population dynamics models in fisheries. Natural Resource Modeling 16: 341–392.
Richards, L. J., J. T. Schnute, and N. Olsen. 1997. Visualizing catch-age analysis: a case study. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 54: 1646–1658.
Ralston, S. 2002. West coast groundfish harvest policy. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 22: 249–250.
Restrepo, V. R., G. G. Thompson, P. M. Mace, W. L. Gabriel, L. L. Low, A. D. MacCall, R. D. Methot, J. E. Powers, B. L. Taylor, P. R. Wade, and J. F. Witzig. 1998. Technical Guidance on the Use of Precautionary Approaches to Implementing National Standard 1 of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act. NOAA Technical Memorandum. NMFS–F/SPO–31.
Schirripa, M. J. and J. J. Colbert. 2006. Interannual changes in sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria) recruitment in relation to oceanographic conditions within the California Current System. Fisheries Oceanography 15 (1): 25–36.
Schnute, J. T., M. N. Maunder, and J. N. Ianelli. 2007. Designing tools to evaluate fishery management strategies: can the scientific community deliver? ICES Journal of Marine Science 64: 1077–1084.
Sitar, S. P., J. R. Bence, J. E. Johnson, M. P. Ebener, and W. W. Taylor. 1999. Lake Trout mortality and abundance in Southern Lake Huron. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 19: 881–900.
Smith, A. D. M., K. J. Sainsbury, and R. A. Stevens. 1999. Implementing effective fisheries management systems—management strategy evaluation and the Australian partnership approach. ICES Journal of Marine Science 56: 967–979.
Somerton, D. A., P. T. Munro, and K. L. Weinberg. 2007. Whole-gear efficiency of a benthic survey trawl for flatfish. Fishery Bulletin 105: 278–291.
Tyler, A. V., R. J. Beamish, and G. A. McFarlane. 1989. Implications of age determination errors to yield estimates. 27–35. In R. J. Beamish and G. A. McFarlane (Eds.), Effects of Ocean Variability on Recruitment and an Evaluation of Parameters Used in Stock Assessment Models. Canadian Special Publications in Fisheries and Aquatic Science 108: 27–35.
Walters, C. J. and S. J. D. Martell. 2004. Fisheries Ecology and Management. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. 399 p.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2009 Springer Science + Business Media B.V
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Methot, R.D. (2009). Stock Assessment: Operational Models in Support of Fisheries Management. In: Beamish, R.J., Rothschild, B.J. (eds) The Future of Fisheries Science in North America. Fish & Fisheries Series, vol 31. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9210-7_9
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9210-7_9
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-9209-1
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-9210-7
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)