Abstract

The stock status of roman Chrysoblephus laticeps was estimated in the Goukamma, a temperate South African marine protected area (MPA). Standardised catch per unit effort (CPUE) from a controlled angling survey on both sides of the MPA border was employed to extrapolate the CPUE at zero fishing mortality. Converted into biomass, the estimate (61% of unexploited biomass) lay midway between those of two biomass-per-recruit (B/R) models for the same population based on angling and diving surveys (i.e. 52% and 69% of unexploited biomass respectively). The extrapolated CPUE at zero fishing mortality (4.4 fish angler-hour−1) in this study compared well with the mean CPUE of 4.6 fish angler-hour−1 determined during a concomitant survey in the core area of the nearby Tsitsikamma MPA – the oldest, and one of the largest, MPAs in Africa. Extrapolations of CPUE have the potential to deliver reliable and consistent estimates of stock status and could offer a practical alternative to conventional B/R models.

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