Estimation of the spawning stock and recruitment relationship of Octopus vulgaris in Asturias (Bay of Biscay) with generalized depletion models: implications for the applicability of MSY

Author:

Roa-Ureta Rubén H1ORCID,Fernández-Rueda M del Pino2,Acuña José Luis3,Rivera Antonella4ORCID,González-Gil Ricardo5,García-Flórez Lucía2

Affiliation:

1. Independent consultant, Portugalete 48920 Bizkaia, Spain

2. Principado de Asturias, Consejería de Medio Rural y Cohesión Territorial, 33212 Gijón, Spain

3. Departamento de Biología de organismos y Sistemas, Universidad de Oviedo, 33005 Oviedo, Spain

4. The Coral Reef Alliance, Mesoamerican Region, Oakland, CA 94612, USA

5. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1XQ, UK

Abstract

Abstract We developed a new type of generalized depletion model adapted to the rapid life cycle of Octopus vulgaris and the data collection framework put in place in its co-managed small-scale fishery (SSF) in Asturias, northwest Spain. The model uses weekly data from 19 seasons to estimate annual recruitment and female spawners emigration out of the vulnerable stock to attend to their broods. The matched annual spawners-recruitment (SR) magnitudes are then used as observations in a non-Bayesian hierarchical inference framework. The Shepherd SR model was selected among three alternatives. The stock has a high degree of density-dependence, leading to overcompensation. The estimated SR model has an unstable equilibrium point, driving the stock to deterministic cyclic fluctuations under small disturbances. Under those conditions the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) is not applicable, lending further credence to Sidney Holt’s opposition to the MSY as a basis for the elaboration of fishery management objectives, with potentially wide relevance to the management of SSF and cephalopod fisheries. We argue that harvest rates based on mean latent productivity, a concept that includes the MSY as a special case, are more adequate and sustainable for fluctuating stocks.

Funder

European Maritime and Fisheries Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

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