Incorporating harvest–population diversity trade-offs into harvest policy analyses of salmon management in large river basins

Author:

Connors Brendan M.1,Staton Benjamin23,Coggins Lewis4,Walters Carl5,Jones Mike6,Gwinn Daniel7,Catalano Matt2,Fleischman Steve8

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Ocean Sciences, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 9860 W Saanich Rd., Sidney, BC V8L 5T5, Canada.

2. Auburn University, 217 Swingle Hall, Auburn, AL 36849, USA.

3. Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, 700 NE Multnomah St., Portland, OR 97232, USA.

4. US Fish and Wildlife Service, 807 Chief Eddie Hoffman Hwy., Bethel, AK 99559, USA.

5. The University of British Columbia, 2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.

6. Michigan State University, 80 Wilson Road, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.

7. Biometric Research, 3 Hulbert Street, South Fremantle, WA 6162, Australia.

8. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, 333 Raspberry Rd., Anchorage, AK 99518, USA.

Abstract

Accounting for population diversity can be critical to the sustainable management of mixed-stock fisheries because harvest rates that can be sustained by productive populations may come at the cost of overfishing less productive ones. While these harvest–diversity trade-offs are well-recognized, their consequences for harvest policy performance are not often explicitly evaluated in contemporary fisheries management. We use closed-loop simulations to evaluate the ability of alternative harvest policies to meet population diversity and fishery objectives for one of the largest subsistence Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) fisheries in the world (Kuskokwim River Basin in western Alaska). We found clear evidence of population diversity that resulted in asymmetric trade-offs among fishery and conservation objectives whereby policies that forgo relatively small amounts of harvest result in relatively large increases in equitable access to Chinook and elimination of risk of weak stock extirpation. The performance of alternative harvest policies, and the magnitude of trade-offs, were sensitive to regime shifts and uncertainty in the drivers of recruitment variation. However, we found that harvest policies that prioritized meeting minimum subsistence needs were unlikely to jeopardize long-term sustainability.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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