More analytical bite in estimating targets for shark harvest
Authored by Corey J A Bradshaw, Iain C Field, Clive R McMahon, Grant J Johnson, Mark G Meekan, Rik C Buckworth
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.3354/meps10375
Sponsors:
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Platforms:
VORTEX
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The typically slow life histories of sharks make them susceptible to
overexploitation. However, this characteristic also means that shark
populations are more amenable to mark-recapture estimation of vital
rates and to population viability analysis, compared to many teleost
(bony) fishes. We applied this novel approach to inform fisheries
management for 2 shark species (Carcharhinus tilstoni and C. sorrah) in
northern Australia. We calculated survival estimates based on a current
mark-recapture study and age-frequency distributions from historical
catch data, and used these along with other estimates of vital rates to
construct an individual-based population viability analysis (using
VORTEX software). We estimated total current mortality (natural and
fishing-related) from tagging data using Brownie models (mean +/- SE:
0.532 +/- 0.097 and 0.487 +/- 0.136) and recapture rate
(fisheries-related mortality) (0.023 +/- 0.005 and 0.008 +/- 0.003) for
C. tilstoni and C. sorrah, respectively. Based on historical
age-at-length and age-frequency data, mean survival across ages after
historical overexploitation was similar for both species (similar to
0.43, or similar to 0.33 as an age frequency-weighted mean). After
correcting for capture-related mortality and permanent emigration, VORTEX population projections including incrementing simulated harvest
suggest that the current rates of harvest of both species result in
population trajectories that are approximately stable (20 yr predicted
average rate of population change r congruent to 0), but this is
complicated by a variable contribution of the slower-reproducing species
C. limbatus within the black-tip shark complex (C. limbatus is commonly
misidentified as C. tilstoni in the fishery). VORTEX projections also
clearly indicated that the fishery was overexploited in the past. Using
multiple datasets and an individual-based modelling framework to
estimate harvest limits for a commercial fishery provides novel insights
into management. This is especially pertinent to shark populations given
the relative tractability of marking and recovering individuals and the
inherent susceptibility of shark populations to overexploitation.
Tags
Conservation
fisheries
growth
Stock reduction analysis
Northern australia
Carcharhinus-tilstoni
Species identification
Marked animals
Lemon sharks
C. limbatus