Length selectivity of commercial fish traps assessed from in situ comparisons with stereo-video: Is there evidence of sampling bias?

Stock assessments of tropical demersal teleost fisheries generally rely on fishery-dependent samples of age structure. Baited remote underwater stereo-video (stereo-BRUV) systems can provide fishery independent information on the biases and selectivity of particular fishing gears in relation to the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fisheries research 2015-01, Vol.161, p.145-155
Hauptverfasser: Langlois, Tim J., Newman, Stephen J., Cappo, Mike, Harvey, Euan S., Rome, Ben M., Skepper, Craig L., Wakefield, Corey B.
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container_end_page 155
container_issue
container_start_page 145
container_title Fisheries research
container_volume 161
creator Langlois, Tim J.
Newman, Stephen J.
Cappo, Mike
Harvey, Euan S.
Rome, Ben M.
Skepper, Craig L.
Wakefield, Corey B.
description Stock assessments of tropical demersal teleost fisheries generally rely on fishery-dependent samples of age structure. Baited remote underwater stereo-video (stereo-BRUV) systems can provide fishery independent information on the biases and selectivity of particular fishing gears in relation to the length distribution of what is potentially available for capture. In the tropical demersal fishery off northwestern Australia the length distributions of 12 species sampled by standard commercial fish traps and stereo-BRUVs were compared using kernel density estimation techniques. We found no significant differences in the shape of the length distributions sampled by either method. However, the location (mean length) of the length distribution of seven of the 11 target species and the one bycatch species differed between the sampling methods. A family-specific trend was exhibited, likely due to the ambush behaviour of larger epinephelids in traps and the saturation of the field of view of stereo-BRUV by schools of smaller lutjanids. However, the difference in mean length was not biologically significant for these families. These results indicate that samples of target species derived from commercial trap catches are likely to provide representative and robust estimates of vital population statistics and life history parameters.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.fishres.2014.06.008
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Epinephelidae
Fishery independent
Kimberley
Length frequency
Lutjanidae
Stereo BRUV
Teleostei
title Length selectivity of commercial fish traps assessed from in situ comparisons with stereo-video: Is there evidence of sampling bias?
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