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Aquat. Living Resour. 22 (2009) 243-254
DOI: 10.1051/alr/2009025
Towards an ecosystem approach to fisheries management (EAFM) when trawl surveys provide the main source of information
John Cotter1, Pierre Petitgas2, Alvaro Abella3, Panayiota Apostolaki1, Benoit Mesnil2, Chrissi-Yianna Politou4, Jacques Rivoirard5, Marie-Joëlle Rochet2, Maria Teresa Spedicato6, Verena M. Trenkel2 and Mathieu Woillez51 CEFAS, Lowestoft, NR33 0HT, UK
2 IFREMER, Département EMH, BP 21105, 44311 Nantes, France
3 ARPAT Agenzia Regionale per la Protezione Ambientale della Toscana, Via Marradi 114, 57100 Livorno, Italy
4 Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, Institute of Marine Biological Resources, Aghios Kosmas, Hellinikon, Athens 16604, Greece
5 Mines-ParisTech, Centre de Géosciences/Géostatistique, 35 rue St Honoré, 77300 Fontainebleau, France
6 COISPA Tecnologia & Ricerca, Via dei Trulli, 18/20, 70045 Torre a Mare, Bari, Italy
Received 8 September 2008; Accepted 25 March 2009 ; Published online 17 June 2009.
Abstract - Ideas and considerations are put forward for managing fisheries and marine populations using primarily trawl surveys to supply biological and spatial indicators of the state of stocks, and to permit catch per unit effort (CPUE)-based assessments. Trawl surveys seldom allow absolute estimates of fish population sizes but, if appropriately located, timed, and designed, can provide a broad range of information about catchable fish species and the ecosystem that supports them. This information may be more conducive to sustainable management of fisheries than the traditional focus on the abundances of selected stocks. The paper first briefly proposes how survey-based methods might supplement existing fishery-dependent stock assessments, as would be necessary during a transition phase to a more ecosystem-orientated system of management. Full survey-based management is then considered in relation to management objectives, the selection of indicators, survey design, reference periods, levels and directions, statistical aspects, CPUE-based assessments, and management responses to good and bad signals from the ecosystem. We argue that existing fishery-dependent stock assessments cannot be claimed to produce absolute estimates of stock abundance and fishing mortality because natural mortality (M) is seldom known accurately and, therefore, that they should not be presumed superior to the relative information from surveys, and an agreeable form of adaptive management.
Key words: Fisheries management / Trawl survey / State indicator / Spatial indicator / Survey-based stock assessment / Fisheries-independent assessment / Fishing effort indicator
Corresponding author: john.cotter@fishworldscience.com
© EDP Sciences, IFREMER, IRD 2009
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