FeedbackAboutHelpLogin
Department of Commerce National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Department of Commerce
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
CoRIS Site Home Search BrowseSearch Tips
CoRIS Banner

.

Length-based assessment of sustainability benchmarks for coral reef fishes in Puerto Rico


Description:

Author(s):
Ault, J. S., Smith, S. G., Luo, J., Monaco, M. E., Appeldorn, R. S.
Title:
Length-based assessment of sustainability benchmarks for coral reef fishes in Puerto Rico
Publication Date:
2008
Institution:
University of Miami, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science; NOAA NOS Biogeography Div.; University of Puerto Rico, Dept. of Marine Sciences
Journal Title:
Environmental Conservation
Volume:
35
Issue:
3
Page(s):
221-231
Abstract:
"The sustainability of multispecies coral reef fisheries is a key conservation concern given their economic and ecological importance. Empirical estimation and numerical model analyses were conducted to evaluate exploitation status via resource reference points (or sustainability benchmarks) for coral reef fishes of the snapper-grouper complex in Puerto Rico. Mean size (L, in length) of animals in the exploited part of the population was estimated from fishery-dependent and fishery-independent size composition data and used as an indicator variable of exploitation rates. In application, fishing mortality rates estimated from L of various data sources were comparable. Of the 25 reef fish species assessed, 16 were below 30% spawning potential ratio (SPR), six were above 30% SPR, and three could not be reliably determined owing to low sample sizes. These findings indicate that a majority of snapper-grouper species in Puerto Rico are currently fished at unsustainable levels."
Keywords:
average size; coral-reef fish; fishery exploitation; Puerto Rico
Electronic DOI:

Back to Top
/search/rest/document?f=html&id=%7B048910CE-9B1F-417C-8DF9-034DDC4F03CF%7D
This Geoportal was built using the Geoportal Server. Please read the Disclaimer and Privacy or Contact Us.