Potential population and economic consequences of sublethal injuries in the spiny lobster fishery of the Florida Keys
Authored by D M Parsons, D B Eggleston
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1071/mf06149
Sponsors:
United States Fish and Wildlife Service
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Animals that interact with but are not retained by fishing gears may
later die. The population and economic consequences of these sublethal
fishery interactions are seldom known but may be significant. In the
present study, a population model was used to quantify potential
population and economic consequences of injuries that Caribbean spiny
lobsters (Panulirus argus) sustain from fishing activities in the
Florida Keys, USA. Injuries generated by the fishery are known to reduce
growth and elevate mortality. Simulation modelling results indicated
that injuries may reduce adult lobster abundance and associated landings
by >= 50\% in areas with high recreational fishing effort. When
simulated injuries were similar to 20 times lower (representing areas
with lower fishing effort), these injuries were only responsible for a 5
and 8\% reduction in the adult lobster population and commercial
landings respectively. Important parameters within the model (growth, time in stage and mortality of injured lobsters) were altered by +/-
10\% to assess model sensitivity. Final results changed < 10\% (with the
exception of one 15\% change), suggesting that model output was
relatively insensitive to variation in key parameters. When the impact
of sublethal injuries was applied to the entire spiny lobster fishery in
the Florida Keys, adult stock biomass and annual commercial landings
were reduced by 900 and 160 t (US\$ 1.6 million) respectively. These
results suggest that sublethal fishery interactions can lead to high
population and economic losses, and highlight the need to incorporate
sublethal injuries into stock assessments and economic models.
Tags
Management
Mortality
sociality
attraction
Survival
Panulirus-argus
Rock lobster
Trap fishery
Bycatch
Octopus