Performance of precautionary reference points in providing management advice on North Sea fish stocks
Author(s) -
G.J. Piet,
Jake Rice
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
ices journal of marine science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1095-9289
pISSN - 1054-3139
DOI - 10.1016/j.icesjms.2004.08.009
Subject(s) - fishing , status quo , stock (firearms) , stock assessment , fishery , advice (programming) , fish stock , precautionary principle , environmental science , fisheries management , environmental resource management , business , actuarial science , computer science , geography , ecology , economics , biology , archaeology , market economy , programming language
For 17 stocks in the North Sea, the performance and effectiveness of management advice using precautionary reference points was evaluated. Three criteria were used to identify whether a stock was within safe biological limits: SSB Fpa, or SSB Fpa. Four scenarios were considered, comparing the advice in the assessment year with what is retrospectively (2002 assessment) known to be the status of the stock at that time: (1) stock outside safe biological limits, advice to reduce fishing; (2) stock outside safe biological limits, advice for status quo harvesting; (3) stock within safe biological limits, advice to reduce fishing; and (4) stock within safe biological limits, advice for status quo (or increased) harvesting. Signal Detection Theory was applied to these scenarios, and the proportion of Hits (1 and 4), Misses (2), and False Alarms (3) were determined for each year as the proportion of the stocks for which the respective scenarios applied. Using both Bpa and Fpa was deemed the approach with the lowest error rate, and it resulted in about the same proportion of Hits in management advice as when Bpa alone was used (62%), but the proportion of Misses was slightly lower (24% vs. 26%). Therefore, the suggested EcoQ element would be the proportion of commercial fish stocks within safe biological limits (i.e. SSB > Bpa, F 60%. A possible explanation is that most of these stocks (e.g. flatfish and roundfish) are caught in a mixed fishery, for which TAC management is less effective.
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