INVESTIGADORES
PARMA Ana Maria
artículos
Título:
Precaution in the harvest of Methuselah's clams- the difficulty of getting timely feedback from slow-pace dynamics
Autor/es:
J. M. ORENSANZ; C. HAND; A. M. PARMA; J. VALERO; R. HILBORN
Revista:
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES
Editorial:
NATL RESEARCH COUNCIL CANADA-N R C RESEARCH PRESS
Referencias:
Año: 2004 p. 1355 - 1372
ISSN:
0706-652X
Resumen:
Geoduck (Panopea abrupta) stocks are perceived as stable and their fisheries as sustainable, but this may reflect a mismatch between slow-paced dynamics (maximum recorded age 168 years) and short-term perception. Management is based on biological reference points, whose appropriateness as a means to ensure sustainability is limited by a sedentary lifestyle and long-term trends in productivity. Analysis of age frequency distributions for 1979 1983, postharvest recovery rates measured in Washington in tracts pulse-fished during the 1980s and 1990s, and age frequency distributions compiled in British Columbia during the 1990s consistently suggest that recruitment declined for decades (long before the onset of the fishery), reaching a minimum around 1975, and rebounded afterwards. In such scenario, reliance on   biological-reference-point-based harvest rules without timely feedback could accelerate  population declines, eventually driving an apparently sustainable fishery to collapse. The merits of  approaches that rely on monitoring and feedback using data-driven decision rules are stressed.  Transition from a biological-reference-point-based strategy to one based on monitoring and feedback will demand a shift in research focus to the design of practical monitoring programs and the evaluation of management procedures by means of simulations. For geoducks and other long-lived organisms, monitoring should integrate data informative at different temporal scales. reflect a mismatch between slow-paced dynamics (maximum recorded age 168 years) and short-term perception. Management is based on biological reference points, whose appropriateness as a means to ensure sustainability is limited by a sedentary lifestyle and long-term trends in productivity. Analysis of age frequency distributions for 1979 1983, post-harvest recovery rates measured in Washington in tracts pulse-fished during the 1980s and 1990s, and age frequency distributions compiled in British Columbia during the 1990s consistently suggest that recruitment declined for decades (long before the onset of the fishery), reaching a minimum around 1975, and rebounded afterwards. In such scenario, reliance on biological-reference-point-based harvest rules without timely feedback could acceleratepopulation declines, eventually driving an apparently sustainable fishery to collapse. The merits of approaches that rely on monitoring and feedback using data-driven decision rules are stressed. Transition from a biological-reference-point-based strategy to one based on monitoring and feedback will demand a shift in research focus to the design of practical monitoring programs and the evaluation of management procedures by means of simulations. For geoducks and other long-lived organisms, monitoring should integrate data informative at different temporal scales.