Prerecruit survival and recruitment of northern Gulf of St Lawrence Atlantic cod

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Abstract

Recruitment (R) of exploited marine fish populations is usually modelled exclusively as a function of spawning-stock biomass (SSB). A problem arising when modelling over long time-series is that the nature of the R-SSB relationship is unlikely to be stationary. Changes are often interpreted as productivity regime shifts and are linked to alterations in prerecruit survival rate. We examine the role of environment and predation by fish and harp seals as factors affecting the R-SSB relationship in the northern Gulf of St Lawrence cod, by fitting linear models using combinations of covariates to explain cod prerecruit survival. The most parsimonious model (based on a Bayesian Information Criterion, BIC) included cod, mackerel, and temperature, whereas redfish and seals did not appear in any of the best-fit models. Recruitment models derived from this analysis could be used in operating models for management strategy evaluation simulations for northern Gulf cod, so one could develop harvest control rules that are robust to changes in recruitment productivity regimes. © Canadian Crown Copyright 2008. Published by Oxford Journals. All rights reserved.

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Duplisea, D. E., & Robert, D. (2008). Prerecruit survival and recruitment of northern Gulf of St Lawrence Atlantic cod. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 65(6), 946–952. https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsn081

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