Abstract

The assumption of a proportional relationship between catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) and the abundance of sharks caught by pelagic longliners is tenuous when based on fisher logbooks that report only retained specimens. Nevertheless, commercial logbooks and landings statistics are often the only data available for stock status assessments. Logbook data collected from local and foreign pelagic longline vessels operating in four areas off southern Africa between 2000 and 2015 were used to construct standardized CPUE indices for blue sharks Prionace glauca and shortfin makos Isurus oxyrinchus. Generalized linear mixed models were used to explore the effects of year, month, vessel, fleet and presence of an observer on blue shark and shortfin mako variability. Landing statistics and auxiliary information on the history of the fishery, regulation changes, and market factors were superimposed on the CPUE indices, to test hypotheses that they would influence CPUE trends. Indices in the West and Southwest (Atlantic) areas were elevated for both species, compared to the South and East (Indian Ocean). The scale of year-on-year CPUE increments, up to an order of magnitude for blue sharks, reflected occasional targeting and retention, interspersed with periods where blue sharks were not caught, or discarded and not reported. Increments were smaller for higher value shortfin makos, suggesting that indices were less affected by unreported discarding. CPUE indices and landings of both shark species have increased in recent years, suggesting increased importance as target species. Analysis of logbook data resulted in unreliable indicators of shark abundance, but when trends were interpreted in conjunction with landings data, disaggregated by area and month, and with hindsight of market demand and regulation changes, anomalies could be explained.

Highlights

  • Catch-per-unit effort (CPUE) trends based on fisher logbooks and landings data are widely used in fisheries research to estimate the relative abundance of fished stocks

  • The key assumption that abundance is proportional to CPUE is rarely met, How to cite this article Jordaan et al (2018), Effects of inconsistent reporting, regulation changes and market demand on abundance indices of sharks caught by pelagic longliners off southern Africa

  • Unwanted sharks that are discarded overboard by pelagic longliners targeting mainly tunas and swordfish are infrequently reported in logbooks, and landing statistics underrepresent the actual numbers of sharks caught during a fishing trip (Campana, 2016)

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Summary

Introduction

Catch-per-unit effort (CPUE) trends based on fisher logbooks and landings data are widely used in fisheries research to estimate the relative abundance of fished stocks. The key assumption that abundance is proportional to CPUE is rarely met, How to cite this article Jordaan et al (2018), Effects of inconsistent reporting, regulation changes and market demand on abundance indices of sharks caught by pelagic longliners off southern Africa. Maunder & Punt (2004) reviewed methods to standardize catch and effort data to account for the added variability in inter-annual CPUE trends. Unwanted sharks that are discarded overboard by pelagic longliners targeting mainly tunas and swordfish are infrequently reported in logbooks, and landing statistics underrepresent the actual numbers of sharks caught during a fishing trip (Campana, 2016)

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