Abstract
The efficiency (Q) of survey trawls can now be estimated using a variety of experimental techniques. In this paper, we review these techniques, then consider how the estimates of Q might best be used in stock assessment. Although catch-at-age models such as tuned VPA and Stock Synthesis can estimate the catchability (q) of a survey trawl when the required time series of catch and survey catch per unit effort (c.p.u.e.) data are sufficiently informative, if the time series are short, q estimates may be quite imprecise. In such cases, q in a catch-at-age model might be fixed at a value derived from an experimental estimate of Q. Furthermore, data series are sometimes so deficient that catch-at-age methods can not be used and fishery managers must turn to swept-area estimates of biomass. In these cases, experimentally estimated values of Q may allow less biased estimates of biomass than those now derived under the assumption of Q = 1.0.
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CITATION STYLE
Somerton, D., Ianelli, J., Walsh, S., Smith, S., Godø, O. R., & Ramm, D. (1999). Incorporating experimentally derived estimates of survey trawl efficiency into the stock assessment process: A discussion. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 56(3), 299–302. https://doi.org/10.1006/jmsc.1999.0443
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