Fisheries
Management
•
Lecture
Outline
–
Maximum Sustained Yield
–
Density independent and
dependent growth models
–
Carrying capacity
–
Optimum Sustained Yield
•
Assignments
–
Read pp. 157 - 220 and
303 - 333 in Fisheries Techniques
Fisheries
Management (1930 – 1970)
Maximum
Sustainable Yield
1)
Maximum
Sustainable Yield (MSY)– Management of a fish stock that allows the maximum yearly
harvest that can be sustained through time.
2)
Assumes
that abundance is related to growth, recruitment, and immigration and losses
via natural mortality, fishing mortality, and emigration (Russell 1942)


Example
1)
Peruvian
anchovy (Engraulis ringens)
2)
Maximum
sustained yield estimated at 10 – 11 million tons
Problem
1)
Maximum
fish yield for walleye occurs at exactly 500 individuals.
2)
What
would the population growth rate (dN/dt) be if an additional 600 walleye were
stocked?
3)
Assume
r = 0.005 individuals/day
Problems with
Maximum Sustained Yield
1)
Economic
- May not be consistent with maximizing economic yield
2)
Sociological
- Does not account for aesthetic value of a fishery
3)
Ecological
- Only considers a single species
Optimum
Sustainable Yield (OSY)
1)
A unique
management goal exists for each fishery
2)
Considers
a broad range of considerations (Economic, Sociological, and Ecological)