Evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on Lake Victoria: a case study using CAS and frame data from Uganda

Since 2005, harmonized catch assessment surveys (CASs) have been implemented on Lake Victoria in the three riparian countries Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania to monitor the commercial fish stocks and provide their management advice. The regionally harmonized standard operating procedures for CASs have not been wholly followed due to logistical difficulties. Yet the new approaches adopted have not been documented. This study investigated the alternative approaches used to estimate fish catches on the lake with the aim of determining the most reliable one for providing management advice and also the effect of current sampling routine on the precision of catch estimates provided. The study found the currently used lake-wide approach less reliable and more biased in providing catch estimates compared to the district based approach. Noticeable differences were detected in catch estimates between different months of the year. The study recommends future analyses of CAS data collected on the lake to follow the district based approach. Future CASs should also consider seasonal variations in the sampling design by providing for replication of sampling. The SOPs need updating to document the procedures that deviate from the original sampling design.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nakiyende, H.
Format: thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Published: United Nations University, Fisheries Training Programme 2014
Subjects:Fisheries,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/35711
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-357112021-07-12T03:25:54Z Evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on Lake Victoria: a case study using CAS and frame data from Uganda Nakiyende, H. Fisheries Since 2005, harmonized catch assessment surveys (CASs) have been implemented on Lake Victoria in the three riparian countries Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania to monitor the commercial fish stocks and provide their management advice. The regionally harmonized standard operating procedures for CASs have not been wholly followed due to logistical difficulties. Yet the new approaches adopted have not been documented. This study investigated the alternative approaches used to estimate fish catches on the lake with the aim of determining the most reliable one for providing management advice and also the effect of current sampling routine on the precision of catch estimates provided. The study found the currently used lake-wide approach less reliable and more biased in providing catch estimates compared to the district based approach. Noticeable differences were detected in catch estimates between different months of the year. The study recommends future analyses of CAS data collected on the lake to follow the district based approach. Future CASs should also consider seasonal variations in the sampling design by providing for replication of sampling. The SOPs need updating to document the procedures that deviate from the original sampling design. Other 2021-06-24T17:51:44Z 2021-06-24T17:51:44Z 2014 thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1834/35711 en application/pdf application/pdf 43 United Nations University, Fisheries Training Programme http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/20850 4230 2016-06-22 12:50:48 20850 National Fisheries Resources Research Institute, Uganda
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 Fisheries
Fisheries
spellingShingle Fisheries
Fisheries
Nakiyende, H.
Evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on Lake Victoria: a case study using CAS and frame data from Uganda
description Since 2005, harmonized catch assessment surveys (CASs) have been implemented on Lake Victoria in the three riparian countries Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania to monitor the commercial fish stocks and provide their management advice. The regionally harmonized standard operating procedures for CASs have not been wholly followed due to logistical difficulties. Yet the new approaches adopted have not been documented. This study investigated the alternative approaches used to estimate fish catches on the lake with the aim of determining the most reliable one for providing management advice and also the effect of current sampling routine on the precision of catch estimates provided. The study found the currently used lake-wide approach less reliable and more biased in providing catch estimates compared to the district based approach. Noticeable differences were detected in catch estimates between different months of the year. The study recommends future analyses of CAS data collected on the lake to follow the district based approach. Future CASs should also consider seasonal variations in the sampling design by providing for replication of sampling. The SOPs need updating to document the procedures that deviate from the original sampling design.
format thesis
topic_facet Fisheries
author Nakiyende, H.
author_facet Nakiyende, H.
author_sort Nakiyende, H.
title Evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on Lake Victoria: a case study using CAS and frame data from Uganda
title_short Evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on Lake Victoria: a case study using CAS and frame data from Uganda
title_full Evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on Lake Victoria: a case study using CAS and frame data from Uganda
title_fullStr Evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on Lake Victoria: a case study using CAS and frame data from Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on Lake Victoria: a case study using CAS and frame data from Uganda
title_sort evaluation of approaches to estimate fish catches on lake victoria: a case study using cas and frame data from uganda
publisher United Nations University, Fisheries Training Programme
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/35711
work_keys_str_mv AT nakiyendeh evaluationofapproachestoestimatefishcatchesonlakevictoriaacasestudyusingcasandframedatafromuganda
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