Population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, Haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the United States

Changes in the age structure and population size of whitegrunt, Haemulon plumieri, from North Carolina through the Florida Keys were examined using records of landings and size frequencies of fish from commercial, re~reational, and headboat fisheries from 1986-1998. Data were stratified into two geographical areas: North Carolina and South Carolina; and southeast Florida. Population size in numbers at age was estimated for each year and geographical area by applying an uncalibrated separable virtual population analysis (SVPA) to the landings in numbers at age. Acalibrated virtual population analysis, FADAPT, was also run for data from North Carolina and South Carolina. SVPA and FADAPT were used to estimate annual, age-specific fishing mortality (F) for four levels of natural mortality (M = 0.20, 0.25, 0.30, and 0.35). The best estimate of M for white grunt is 0.30. Landings of white grunt in the Carolinas for the three fisheries have generally decreased in recent years, but have held fairly steady for the species in southeast Florida. Age at entry and age atfull recruitment were age-1 and age-4 for the Carolinas, and age-l and age-3 for southeast Florida. With M = 0.30, levels of fishing mortality (F) on the fully-recruited ages were 0.23 for the Carolinas and 0.33 for southeast Florida. Spawning potential ratio (SPR) at M = 0.30 was 57% for the Carolinas and 61% for southeast Florida, which indicates that the species, by definition, has not been over-exploited by fishing. The results of this assessment of the white grunt population off the Carolinas agree with the recent F/FMSY analysis of white grunt (Anonymous, 1999).(PDF contaons 72 pages)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Potts, Jennifer C.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service/Southeast Fisheries Science Center 2000
Subjects:Ecology, Management, Fisheries,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/19964
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-199642021-07-12T02:23:19Z Population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, Haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the United States Potts, Jennifer C. Ecology Management Fisheries Changes in the age structure and population size of whitegrunt, Haemulon plumieri, from North Carolina through the Florida Keys were examined using records of landings and size frequencies of fish from commercial, re~reational, and headboat fisheries from 1986-1998. Data were stratified into two geographical areas: North Carolina and South Carolina; and southeast Florida. Population size in numbers at age was estimated for each year and geographical area by applying an uncalibrated separable virtual population analysis (SVPA) to the landings in numbers at age. Acalibrated virtual population analysis, FADAPT, was also run for data from North Carolina and South Carolina. SVPA and FADAPT were used to estimate annual, age-specific fishing mortality (F) for four levels of natural mortality (M = 0.20, 0.25, 0.30, and 0.35). The best estimate of M for white grunt is 0.30. Landings of white grunt in the Carolinas for the three fisheries have generally decreased in recent years, but have held fairly steady for the species in southeast Florida. Age at entry and age atfull recruitment were age-1 and age-4 for the Carolinas, and age-l and age-3 for southeast Florida. With M = 0.30, levels of fishing mortality (F) on the fully-recruited ages were 0.23 for the Carolinas and 0.33 for southeast Florida. Spawning potential ratio (SPR) at M = 0.30 was 57% for the Carolinas and 61% for southeast Florida, which indicates that the species, by definition, has not been over-exploited by fishing. The results of this assessment of the white grunt population off the Carolinas agree with the recent F/FMSY analysis of white grunt (Anonymous, 1999).(PDF contaons 72 pages) 2021-06-24T15:16:17Z 2021-06-24T15:16:17Z 2000 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/19964 en NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC http://www.ccfhr.noaa.gov/documents/nmfs-sefsc-tm442.pdf application/pdf application/pdf NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service/Southeast Fisheries Science Center Beaufort, NC http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/2146 403 2011-09-29 19:33:21 2146 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
Management
Fisheries
Ecology
Management
Fisheries
spellingShingle Ecology
Management
Fisheries
Ecology
Management
Fisheries
Potts, Jennifer C.
Population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, Haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the United States
description Changes in the age structure and population size of whitegrunt, Haemulon plumieri, from North Carolina through the Florida Keys were examined using records of landings and size frequencies of fish from commercial, re~reational, and headboat fisheries from 1986-1998. Data were stratified into two geographical areas: North Carolina and South Carolina; and southeast Florida. Population size in numbers at age was estimated for each year and geographical area by applying an uncalibrated separable virtual population analysis (SVPA) to the landings in numbers at age. Acalibrated virtual population analysis, FADAPT, was also run for data from North Carolina and South Carolina. SVPA and FADAPT were used to estimate annual, age-specific fishing mortality (F) for four levels of natural mortality (M = 0.20, 0.25, 0.30, and 0.35). The best estimate of M for white grunt is 0.30. Landings of white grunt in the Carolinas for the three fisheries have generally decreased in recent years, but have held fairly steady for the species in southeast Florida. Age at entry and age atfull recruitment were age-1 and age-4 for the Carolinas, and age-l and age-3 for southeast Florida. With M = 0.30, levels of fishing mortality (F) on the fully-recruited ages were 0.23 for the Carolinas and 0.33 for southeast Florida. Spawning potential ratio (SPR) at M = 0.30 was 57% for the Carolinas and 61% for southeast Florida, which indicates that the species, by definition, has not been over-exploited by fishing. The results of this assessment of the white grunt population off the Carolinas agree with the recent F/FMSY analysis of white grunt (Anonymous, 1999).(PDF contaons 72 pages)
format monograph
topic_facet Ecology
Management
Fisheries
author Potts, Jennifer C.
author_facet Potts, Jennifer C.
author_sort Potts, Jennifer C.
title Population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, Haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the United States
title_short Population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, Haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the United States
title_full Population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, Haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the United States
title_fullStr Population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, Haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the United States
title_full_unstemmed Population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, Haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the United States
title_sort population assessment of two stocks of white grunt, haemulon plumieri, from the southeastern coast of the united states
publisher NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service/Southeast Fisheries Science Center
publishDate 2000
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/19964
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