USGS - science for a changing world

Great Lakes Science Center

About Us Products Research Library Links
Research Publications Research Publications
Home Data FITPOP BOOTCLUS PREDTOX Commercial Fishing Reports
Publications Reports Fact Sheets Great Lakes Copepod Key Spawning and Nursery Atlas
Research Publications 20092008200720062005Awards
Publiations Database Database Search (USGS Users) Help Notes Keyword List
2007 Publications List

Stockwell, Jason D., Daniel L. Yule, Thomas R. Hrabik, Jean V. Adams, Owen T. Gorman, and Beth V. Holbrook. 2007. Vertical distribution of fish biomass in Lake Superior: Implications for day bottom trawl surveys. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 27(3): 735-749.
Contribution # 1384

Abstract

Evaluation of the biases in sampling methodology is essential for understanding the limitations of abundance and biomass estimates of fish populations. Estimates from surveys that rely solely on bottom trawls may be particularly vulnerable to bias if pelagic fish are numerous. We evaluated the variability in the vertical distribution of fish biomass during the U.S. Geological Survey's annual spring bottom trawl survey of Lake Superior using concurrent hydroacoustic observations to (1) test the assumption that fish are generally demersal during the day and (2) evaluate the potential for predictive models to improve bottom trawl–determined biomass estimates. Our results indicate that the assumption that fish exhibit demersal behavior during the annual spring bottom trawl survey in Lake Superior is unfounded. Bottom trawl biomass (BBT) estimates (mean ± SE) for species known to exhibit pelagic behavior (cisco Coregonus artedii, bloater C. hoyi, kiyi C. kiyi, and rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax; 3.01 ± 0.73 kg/ha) were not significantly greater than mean acoustic pelagic zone biomass (BAPZ) estimates (6.39 ± 2.03 kg/ha). Mean BAPZ estimates were 1.6- to 4.8-fold greater than mean BBT estimates over 4 years of sampling. The relationship between concurrent BAPZ and BBT estimates was marginally significant and highly variable. Predicted BAPZestimates using cross-validation models were sensitive to adjustments for back-transforming from the logarithmic to the linear scale and poorly corresponded to observed BAPZ estimates. We conclude that statistical models to predict BAPZ from day BBT cannot be developed. We propose that night sampling with multiple gears will be necessary to generate better biomass estimates for management needs.

TOP  BACK

Accessibility FOIA Privacy Policies and Notices

Take Pride in America logo USA.gov logo U.S. Department of the Interior | U.S. Geological Survey
URL: www.glsc.usgs.gov/publications.php?action=2007&abstract=1384
Page Contact Information: GLSC Webmaster
Page Last Modified: March 25, 2009 02:34pm