Fisheries Stocks and Stock Identification Flashcards

1
Q

Fishery Stocks

A
  • Individuals of a species are not distributed homogeneously in space or time
  • Many species exhibit intraspecific population (i.e., stock) structure
  • Recruitment originates from these individuals (a stock is self-recruiting)
  • A stock is the group over which “vital rates” are homogeneous (growth, maturity, mortality, etc.)
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2
Q

Why is it so important to understand stock structure?

A

Necessary for assessments and to understand the range of fishery interactions (connectivity).

Understanding the related, connected, and hierarchy is important to manage or assess population

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3
Q

homogeneously

A

of the same or a similar kind or nature

of uniform structure or composition throughout

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4
Q

Concept “The Unit Stock”

A

Ideally, a unit stock is a self-contained and self-perpetuating group, with no mixture from outside, and within which the biological characteristics and the impact of fishing are uniform. Such a unit would also be a genetic unit.

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5
Q

What is the ideal unit stock?

A

both an ecological unit and an evolutionary unit

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6
Q

What is the spectrum of the stock assessment?

A

Unit Stock (left ) and Panmixia (Right)

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7
Q

Panmixia

A

Has the spectrum goes further from unit stock, an increase in stock interdependence (connectivity) and migration (gene flow).

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8
Q

What was an important concept that came out of the Secor 2014 diagrams?

A

Time component and location of the stock can sway both the population size. It important to understand movement of a species through time and space.

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9
Q

Evolutionary Stocks vs ecological stocks. What are the questions?

A

Stock identification (discrimination)
Connectivity
Mixed-stock analyses (stock composition analysis)
Unique genetic variation

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10
Q

What are the methods used to infer evolutionary stock structure?

A

Meristic characters

Morphometric data

Genetic analyses
-Proteins
-DNA
-Nuclear
-Mitochondrial

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11
Q

What are the methods used to infer ecological stock structure?

A

Spatial analyses of fisheries data

Natural tags
-Parasites
-Otolith elemental and stable isotope analyses
-Organic pollutants

Tagging
-Conventional
-Electronic

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12
Q

How do you determine what method to use to infer stock structure?

A

Based on what the questions are, it leads to the type of technique is used.

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13
Q

Morphometric and Meristic Analyses

A

Differences in relative body shape or size (morphometrics)

Differences in number of vertebrae, fin rays, scale rows, etc. (meristic data)

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14
Q

What is the role of genetics vs. environment (ecophenotypic variation)?

A

Fish at the north end of the range seem to have more vertebrae

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15
Q

What are the three main measurements for morphometric analyses?

A

total length, fork length, standard length.

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16
Q

Genetic Analyses

A

In the absence of gene flow (migration and mating), populations will diverge genetically due to random (genetic) drift or natural selection

Analysis of genetic characters can provide insights into stock structure

Note: it does not take much gene flow to maintain genetic connectivity

17
Q

Genetic Characters and Analyses

A

Proteins (allozyme analysis)

Mitochondrial DNA (maternally inherited)

Nuclear DNA (biparentally inherited)
-Specific gene region (sequencing)
-Microsatellite analysis
-Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis
-Next generation sequencing (NGS) –1000s of SNPs

18
Q

What are some types of tags used?

A

Conventional tags
Acoustic tags
Electronic tags

19
Q

What are some characteristics of conventional tags?

A

Movement from point or release to point of recapture

Need for sample design (where tags are deployed, likelihood of having a tag recaptured, reported, etc.)

20
Q

What are the two types of acoustic tags?

A

Passive and active

21
Q

What are the three types of electronic tags?

A

Internal archival tags
Pop-up archival tags
Spot tags

22
Q

What are the three main types of natural tags?

A
  • Parasites
  • Otolith Analyses
  • Organic Pollutants
23
Q

Parasites as Natural Tags

A

Species composition and abundance of parasites may differ between stocks due to:
-Biogeography
-Intermediate host availability
-Fish stock life history

Presence can be used to confirm that host was in specific area

Expertise in parasite taxonomy typically difficult to find

24
Q

Natural Tags – Otolith Analyses

A

Otolith is not reworked

Concentrations of trace elements and stable isotopes vary spatially (and in many cases temporally)

If one knows conditions at the time of spawning, can assign individuals to spawning grounds

25
Q

What was one example of using Otolith Analysis?

A

Weakfish Stock Structure
- Fish from 5 estuaries along Atlantic coast w/minor differences Mg, Mn, Sr, Ba, δ13C, & δ18O

Use linear discriminant function analysis of various elements to separate 1996 YOY weakfish from estuaries

Collect 2 yr old spawning weakfish in 1998 and look at core of otolith to assign to a natal estuary

26
Q

Organic Pollutants as “Natural” Tags

A

Accumulate in fatty tissues, not metabolized (bioaccumulation)

Biomagnify in the food web → top predators have high levels

Different regional concentrations (ratios) of pollutants provide information on where an animal was feeding

Ratios change as animals move
to different feeding areas
(biomass dilution)

Provide information on mixing
and timing of movements