Widow rockfish: Proceedings of a workshop, Tiburon, California, December 11-12, 1980

This workshop was organized because of the increase between 1978 and 1980 in coastwide landings of widow rockfish, from less than 1,000 mt to more than 20,000 mt, and because of scientists' concern with the lack of knowledge both of the fishery and biology of the species. Most scientists active in research on Pacific groundfish, as well as some members of the fishing industry and fishery managers, attended the workshop.These proceedings contain the report of the workshop discussion panel, status reports on California, Oregon, and Washington fisheries through 1980, and a collection of seven papers presented at the workshop. The status reports provide an historical perspective of the development of an important fishery. The papers present a fairly complete survey of biological knowledge of widow rockfish,economic status of the fishery, and fishery-independent methods for estimation of abundance. The papers also contain some information developed after the workshop.Since the workshop, the fishery has matured. Largest landings were made in 1981, when more than 28,000 mt were landed. Maximum sustainable yield (MSY) is estimated to be slightly less than 10,000 mt, and the stock appeared to be at about the MSY level in 1985. The Pacific Fishery Management Council and National Marine Fisheries Service have implemented regulations that have maintained landings since 1983 at approximately the maximum sustainable yield level. Fishery-dependent stock assessments are being made on an annual basis for the Pacific Fishery ManagementCouncil. While these assessments are considered to be the best possible with available data, scientists responsible for the assessment have chosen to delay their publication in the formal scientific literature until more data are obtained. However, the stock assessment reports are available from the Pacific Fishery Management Council.In addition to the papers in this collection, three papers have been published on widow rockfish since 1980. BoehIert, Barss, and Lamberson (1982) estimate fecundity of the species off Oregon; Gunderson (1984) describes the fishery and management actions; and Laroche and Richardson (1981) describe the morphology and distribution of juvenile widow rockfish off Oregon.During the past decade, the fishery for widow rockfish hasdeveloped from a minor fishery to one of the more important on the Pacific Coast. Our knowledge of the biology and dynamics of the species has progressed from minimal to relatively extensive for a groundfish species. It is our intention in preparing this collection of papers to make this knowledge readily available to the scientificcommunity. (PDF file contains 63 pages.)

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Lenarz, William H.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service 1987
Subjects:Ecology, Fisheries, Biology,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20562
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-205622021-06-28T02:00:19Z Widow rockfish: Proceedings of a workshop, Tiburon, California, December 11-12, 1980 Lenarz, William H. Gunderson, Donald R. Ecology Fisheries Biology This workshop was organized because of the increase between 1978 and 1980 in coastwide landings of widow rockfish, from less than 1,000 mt to more than 20,000 mt, and because of scientists' concern with the lack of knowledge both of the fishery and biology of the species. Most scientists active in research on Pacific groundfish, as well as some members of the fishing industry and fishery managers, attended the workshop.These proceedings contain the report of the workshop discussion panel, status reports on California, Oregon, and Washington fisheries through 1980, and a collection of seven papers presented at the workshop. The status reports provide an historical perspective of the development of an important fishery. The papers present a fairly complete survey of biological knowledge of widow rockfish,economic status of the fishery, and fishery-independent methods for estimation of abundance. The papers also contain some information developed after the workshop.Since the workshop, the fishery has matured. Largest landings were made in 1981, when more than 28,000 mt were landed. Maximum sustainable yield (MSY) is estimated to be slightly less than 10,000 mt, and the stock appeared to be at about the MSY level in 1985. The Pacific Fishery Management Council and National Marine Fisheries Service have implemented regulations that have maintained landings since 1983 at approximately the maximum sustainable yield level. Fishery-dependent stock assessments are being made on an annual basis for the Pacific Fishery ManagementCouncil. While these assessments are considered to be the best possible with available data, scientists responsible for the assessment have chosen to delay their publication in the formal scientific literature until more data are obtained. However, the stock assessment reports are available from the Pacific Fishery Management Council.In addition to the papers in this collection, three papers have been published on widow rockfish since 1980. BoehIert, Barss, and Lamberson (1982) estimate fecundity of the species off Oregon; Gunderson (1984) describes the fishery and management actions; and Laroche and Richardson (1981) describe the morphology and distribution of juvenile widow rockfish off Oregon.During the past decade, the fishery for widow rockfish hasdeveloped from a minor fishery to one of the more important on the Pacific Coast. Our knowledge of the biology and dynamics of the species has progressed from minimal to relatively extensive for a groundfish species. It is our intention in preparing this collection of papers to make this knowledge readily available to the scientificcommunity. (PDF file contains 63 pages.) 2021-06-24T15:42:01Z 2021-06-24T15:42:01Z 1987 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20562 en NOAA Technical Report NMFS http://spo.nwr.noaa.gov/tr48pdf application/pdf application/pdf NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/2774 403 2011-09-29 18:27:34 2774 United States National Marine Fisheries Service
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Ecology
Fisheries
Biology
Ecology
Fisheries
Biology
spellingShingle Ecology
Fisheries
Biology
Ecology
Fisheries
Biology
Widow rockfish: Proceedings of a workshop, Tiburon, California, December 11-12, 1980
description This workshop was organized because of the increase between 1978 and 1980 in coastwide landings of widow rockfish, from less than 1,000 mt to more than 20,000 mt, and because of scientists' concern with the lack of knowledge both of the fishery and biology of the species. Most scientists active in research on Pacific groundfish, as well as some members of the fishing industry and fishery managers, attended the workshop.These proceedings contain the report of the workshop discussion panel, status reports on California, Oregon, and Washington fisheries through 1980, and a collection of seven papers presented at the workshop. The status reports provide an historical perspective of the development of an important fishery. The papers present a fairly complete survey of biological knowledge of widow rockfish,economic status of the fishery, and fishery-independent methods for estimation of abundance. The papers also contain some information developed after the workshop.Since the workshop, the fishery has matured. Largest landings were made in 1981, when more than 28,000 mt were landed. Maximum sustainable yield (MSY) is estimated to be slightly less than 10,000 mt, and the stock appeared to be at about the MSY level in 1985. The Pacific Fishery Management Council and National Marine Fisheries Service have implemented regulations that have maintained landings since 1983 at approximately the maximum sustainable yield level. Fishery-dependent stock assessments are being made on an annual basis for the Pacific Fishery ManagementCouncil. While these assessments are considered to be the best possible with available data, scientists responsible for the assessment have chosen to delay their publication in the formal scientific literature until more data are obtained. However, the stock assessment reports are available from the Pacific Fishery Management Council.In addition to the papers in this collection, three papers have been published on widow rockfish since 1980. BoehIert, Barss, and Lamberson (1982) estimate fecundity of the species off Oregon; Gunderson (1984) describes the fishery and management actions; and Laroche and Richardson (1981) describe the morphology and distribution of juvenile widow rockfish off Oregon.During the past decade, the fishery for widow rockfish hasdeveloped from a minor fishery to one of the more important on the Pacific Coast. Our knowledge of the biology and dynamics of the species has progressed from minimal to relatively extensive for a groundfish species. It is our intention in preparing this collection of papers to make this knowledge readily available to the scientificcommunity. (PDF file contains 63 pages.)
author2 Lenarz, William H.
author_facet Lenarz, William H.
format monograph
topic_facet Ecology
Fisheries
Biology
title Widow rockfish: Proceedings of a workshop, Tiburon, California, December 11-12, 1980
title_short Widow rockfish: Proceedings of a workshop, Tiburon, California, December 11-12, 1980
title_full Widow rockfish: Proceedings of a workshop, Tiburon, California, December 11-12, 1980
title_fullStr Widow rockfish: Proceedings of a workshop, Tiburon, California, December 11-12, 1980
title_full_unstemmed Widow rockfish: Proceedings of a workshop, Tiburon, California, December 11-12, 1980
title_sort widow rockfish: proceedings of a workshop, tiburon, california, december 11-12, 1980
publisher NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service
publishDate 1987
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20562
_version_ 1756077380678451200