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The Conservationist's Corner For discussion of everything to do with conservation! |
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Spatial ecology of adult spotted seatrout
Read all 306 pages and this stuck out the MOST Interestingly, Louisiana recently adopted (in 2006) a spatially-explicit management plan instance, an important question may be whether spotted seatrout are able to significantly increasefor Calcasieu Lake. The premise of this management decision, which included a reduction in daily bag limits and imposition of a slot limit, was to ‘preserve’ the renowned trophy-fishery for spotted seatrout in Calcasieu Lake. However, the decision to enact this regulation was based exclusively on socio-economic factors, rather than the biological status of the subpopulation. In fact, no formal stock assessment was conducted as part of the decision-making process. Thus, the status of the subpopulation (stock) was largely unknown (i.e., overfished or not?) at the time regulations were changed. While perhaps setting a bad precedent for fisheries management (i.e., making a decision based purely on socioeconomic reasons), this situation affords a unique opportunity to evaluate the response of spotted seatrout to a spatially-explicit (estuarine-scale) regulations change (i.e., adaptive management, sensu Hilborn and Walters 1992). For example, the response of the stock to the more stringent regulations could be examined by analyzing fisheries independent monitoring data and conducting periodic, formal stock assessments (e.g., every five years). Obviously, response dynamics would largely depend on the status of the stock when regulations were changed, which could be gleaned from the assessment. If the stock was truly overfished at the time of the regulations change, response trajectories in the following period might provide some indication as to whether the regulations were indeed stringent enough to have a positive (re-building) effect. If no stock response is observed, this could indicate a different type of management regulation (e.g., ‘input controls’ such as seasonal closures vs. ‘output controls’ such as bag limits) may be more effective. Finally, if the stock was considered healthy at the time of the regulations change, subsequent abundance and biomass trajectories could provide important clues to potential density-dependence processes in spotted seatrout. For their abundance (when fishing pressure is relaxed) to a degree that allows them to exert higher top-down predation pressure on other species in the ecosystem. As we move towards the future in fisheries science and attempt to implement ecosystem-based fisheries management, questions as these become important because seemingly conservative management actions for one species (e.g., a reduction in fishing mortality) can often have unforeseen (negative) consequences on other species within the ecosystem due to complex species and fisheries interactions (Pine et al. 2009). This study demonstrated that adult spotted seatrout exhibit limited movements in coastal Louisiana. The telemetry study provided strong evidence of high annual residency of adults within an individual estuary (Calcasieu Lake), especially females (~90%). Furthermore, conventional tagging data indicated large-scale movements in excess of 50 km were rare (< 2%), albeit most tag recoveries occurred within two months post-release. Based on these results, I hypothesized the spatial structure of spotted seatrout may best be represented as a metapopulation comprised of subpopulations in each major estuary that were genetically similar (primarily due to male straying), yet demographically independent due to seemingly low interestuarine exchange rates (< 4%). Finally, I proposed an alternative stock assessment technique (spatially-hierarchical models) that could be considered as a management tool to enhance and promote the sustainability of Louisiana’s most sought after sportfish
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Waltrip's Saltwater Guide Service jeremy@geaux-outdoors.com https://m.facebook.com/waltrip.guideservice?id=148838538646862&_rdr |
#2
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Did Math Geek post this before?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I847 using Tapatalk 2 |
#3
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when was this published?
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#4
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Do you have a link? .pdf?
306 pages would be like 2 PhD dissertations |
#5
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Quote:
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#6
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Tried to load the PFD file but took to long.....will try again later
__________________
Waltrip's Saltwater Guide Service jeremy@geaux-outdoors.com https://m.facebook.com/waltrip.guideservice?id=148838538646862&_rdr |
#7
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Quote:
Anyhow, try a PDF. They are a lot smaller than life jackets and more computer friendly. |
#8
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Quote:
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#9
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Lmao.. you got jokes
__________________
Waltrip's Saltwater Guide Service jeremy@geaux-outdoors.com https://m.facebook.com/waltrip.guideservice?id=148838538646862&_rdr |
#10
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#11
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__________________
The cops are the experts on the current criminal trends. If they have determined that a “high capacity” semiautomatic pistol and a .223 semiautomatic rifle with 30-round magazines are the best firearms for them to use to protect people like me and my family, they are obviously the best things for us to use to protect ourselves and our families . |
#12
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Good one
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#13
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i ate crawfish with people who developed the program this past weekend. they just tagged 40 fish last week in lake P. around the train tracks. I didnt relize how expensie the trackers were.
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#14
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This IS a Ph.D. dissertation, just saw it and it was definitely too big to link on here, just google the title W put in and it will show up
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