We propose a 3-step methodological approach to identify and classify fish nurseries for fisheries management purposes. We applied our approach to juvenile European hake Merluccius merluccius in the central Mediterranean Sea. Time series of trawl-survey fish-density data were used to map juvenile hake distribution with Bayesian kriging, while geostatistical aggregation curves were used to find density hot-spots. Persistence measures were adopted to identify nurseries on the basis of their spatio-temporal persistence. We found that areas with a high density of juvenile hake showed a high temporal persistence on both a seasonal and annual basis, with the most persistent nursery areas covering about 5% of the study areas while including about 39% of hake recruitment (averaged over 10 yr). We believe the persistence of these areas is indirect evidence of their importance to the productivity of the population, with many potentially important implications for fisheries management. The approach that we developed to identify hake nurseries can be applied to different species and life stages to improve knowledge of the role of habitat for populations and communities.
Identifying fish nurseries using density and persistence measures / Colloca, Francesco; Bartolino, Valerio; JONA LASINIO, Giovanna; G. J., Lasinio; Maiorano, Luigi; P., Sartor; Ardizzone, Domenico. - In: MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES. - ISSN 0171-8630. - STAMPA. - 381:(2009), pp. 287-296. [10.3354/meps07942]
Identifying fish nurseries using density and persistence measures
COLLOCA, FRANCESCO;BARTOLINO, VALERIO;JONA LASINIO, Giovanna;MAIORANO, Luigi;ARDIZZONE, Domenico
2009
Abstract
We propose a 3-step methodological approach to identify and classify fish nurseries for fisheries management purposes. We applied our approach to juvenile European hake Merluccius merluccius in the central Mediterranean Sea. Time series of trawl-survey fish-density data were used to map juvenile hake distribution with Bayesian kriging, while geostatistical aggregation curves were used to find density hot-spots. Persistence measures were adopted to identify nurseries on the basis of their spatio-temporal persistence. We found that areas with a high density of juvenile hake showed a high temporal persistence on both a seasonal and annual basis, with the most persistent nursery areas covering about 5% of the study areas while including about 39% of hake recruitment (averaged over 10 yr). We believe the persistence of these areas is indirect evidence of their importance to the productivity of the population, with many potentially important implications for fisheries management. The approach that we developed to identify hake nurseries can be applied to different species and life stages to improve knowledge of the role of habitat for populations and communities.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.