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Estimation of growth and mortality parameters from size frequency
distributions lacking age patterns: the red sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus
franciscanus) as an example
B.D. Smith, L.W. Botsford and S.R. Wing
1998. Canadian Journal Of Fisheries And Aquatic Sciences 55 (5):
1236-1247
Abstract
We present a maximum likelihood procedure for estimating population
growth and mortality parameters by simultaneously analysing size
frequency and growth increment data. The model uses von Bertalanffy
growth with variability among individuals in the two parameters
that determine growth rate, and size-dependent mortality. Analyzing
growth increments together with size frequencies reduces the statistical
confounding of the natural mortality rate with von Bertalanffy's
K parameter. We assume steady-state (constant recruitment) conditions
for the size distributions; hence the method does not depend on
age modes in the distribution. We evaluate the bias and precision
of estimates obtained for growth-dominated distributions typical
of the red sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus) in northern
California, although the method and its evaluation could be applied
as easily to mortality-dominated or bimodal distributions. The method
provides good estimates with sample sizes as low as 200 individuals
in a size distribution and 30 growth increments. Results are robust
to random variability in recruitment, measurement error, and sampling
selectivity up to the size where about one third of the distribution
is affected. Estimation of the fishing mortality rate could require
size distributions from both an unharvested and a harvested population;
Estimates of growth and mortality rates depend critically on reliable
growth data.
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