Title:
1 West Atlantic bluefin tuna Executive Summary
2- Biology
-
- Continued progress in knowledge of bluefin
biology, but the complex behaviour of this
species means that much research still needed -
- Recent research in reproductive biology,
demographic modeling and age determination
suggests western bluefin may be less resilient to
fishing than previously thought - WG remains concerned about issues of mixing, and
in particular, the inability to quantify the kind
and extent of mixing for use in assessments - Need to integrate recent and anticipated
advances in otolith microconstituent analyses,
archival tagging and genetics into assessment and
management evaluation processes.
3Fishery indicators catch
QUOTAS
4Fishery indicators catch
2002 landings (3,319 t) highest since
1981 Canadian and Japanese landings stable at
500-600 t U.S. did not catch its quota in
2004-2006 with landings of 899, 717 , and 468 t
5Fishery indicators abundance indices
No consistent changes in CPUE
6State of the stock (review)
Consistent with 2002 SA Less optimistic
estimates of 1994 and 1997 year classes More
optimistic view of recent Fs
7- State of stock low U.S. catches
-
- Plausible explanations
- (1) that availability of fish to the United
States fishery was low - (2) the overall size of population in the west
declined substantially - Evidence (SCRS/2007/171)
- (1) Canada and Japan did not have abnormally low
catches - CPUE series from Gulf of St. Lawrence at high
levels since 2004 - CPUE series from GOM do not show consistent
decline - (2) some abundance indices suggest decline
- declining size composition in some areas
- small changes in F suggested by tag data
despite declining catches - Conclusion
- (1) No strong evidence to favor either
explanation over the other - (2) However, the failure of a fishery to take
half of its TAC for several years, and other new
evidence reviewed by the committee, heightened
concern that the estimate of stock status from
the 2006 assessment may be optimistic
8Outlook
- Short-term (5-year) projections to cover time
until next assessment - assume future recruitment will fluctuate around
recent levels
9Outlook
FMSY 2,100 MT
10-
-
- Current (2006) Catch (including discards) 1,929
t - Short-term Sustainable Yield 2,300 t
- Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSYR) 3,200
(3,000-3,400) - Relative Spawning Stock Biomass
- B2004/B1975 0.18
- B2004/BMSYR 0.41 (0.29-0.54)
- Relative Fishing Mortality3
- F2004/FMSYR 1.7
- F2004/F0.1 3.1
- F2004/Fmax 1.7
- Management Measures
- 2,100 t TAC from 2007 inc. dead disc Rec.
06-06 - 2,700 t TAC from 2003 inc. dead discards Rec.
02-07 - 30 kg (115 cm FL) min. size with 8 tol. Rec.
98-07 - No directed fisheries in Gulf of Mexico Rec.
98-07
BFTW summary table
11- Effect of current regulations
- Recommendation 06-06 expected to result in
rebuilding stock towards convention objective
with fishing mortality rates at about the
estimated MSY level - New evidence suggests that current regulations
may be insufficient to achieve the objectives
(cannot evaluate until next assessment) - Ability to achieve the convention objectives
would be further hampered by future use of
accumulated unused quota (large amount involved
for WBFT
12- Management recommendations
-
- Commission responded positively, making Rec.
06-06, - which establishes a quota of 2,100 MT
- However, the Committee is even more concerned
about - status of west stock than it was a year ago.
Further - advice provided after the next assessment
(2008). - Evidence accumulating that both productivity of
west - stock and west bluefin fisheries linked to the
east stock. - One plausible explanation for failure of west
fishery to - take TAC in recent years is that it is partly
dependent on - east fish, and east fish now less available to
the west -
- Therefore, management actions taken in the
eastern - Atlantic and Mediterranean are likely to impact
recovery
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