Abstract

There is broad interest in the development of efficient marine protected areas (MPAs) to reduce bycatch and end overfishing of speckled hind (Epinephelus drummondhayi) and warsaw grouper (Hyporthodus nigritus) in the Atlantic Ocean off the southeastern U.S. We assimilated decades of data from many fishery-dependent, fishery-independent, and anecdotal sources to describe the spatial distribution of these data limited stocks. A spatial classification model was developed to categorize depth-grids based on the distribution of speckled hind and warsaw grouper point observations and identified benthic habitats. Logistic regression analysis was used to develop a quantitative model to predict the spatial distribution of speckled hind and warsaw grouper as a function of depth, latitude, and habitat. Models, controlling for sampling gear effects, were selected based on AIC and 10-fold cross validation. The best-fitting model for warsaw grouper included latitude and depth to explain 10.8% of the variability in probability of detection, with a false prediction rate of 28–33%. The best-fitting model for speckled hind, per cross-validation, included latitude and depth to explain 36.8% of the variability in probability of detection, with a false prediction rate of 25–27%. The best-fitting speckled hind model, per AIC, also included habitat, but had false prediction rates up to 36%. Speckled hind and warsaw grouper habitats followed a shelf-edge hardbottom ridge from North Carolina to southeast Florida, with speckled hind more common to the north and warsaw grouper more common to the south. The proportion of habitat classifications and model-estimated stock contained within established and proposed MPAs was computed. Existing MPAs covered 10% of probable shelf-edge habitats for speckled hind and warsaw grouper, protecting 3–8% of speckled hind and 8% of warsaw grouper stocks. Proposed MPAs could add 24% more probable shelf-edge habitat, and protect an additional 14–29% of speckled hind and 20% of warsaw grouper stocks.

Highlights

  • The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council (SAFMC) manages speckled hind (Epinephelus drummondhayi) and warsaw grouper (Hyporthodus nigritus) from federal waters at the Virginia/ North Carolina border through the Atlantic side of the Florida Keys

  • In the first formal stock assessment of speckled hind and warsaw grouper [11], catch curve analyses indicated that static spawning potential ratios (SPR) for warsaw grouper were between 0.2% and 6% in 1988 and 1990, and speckled hind SPR values declined from 25% in 1988 to 5% in 1999 [4,5,6,7]

  • Data Sources Plots of point observations of speckled hind and warsaw grouper indicated that the stocks were predominantly distributed on the shelf edge between 25–100 fathoms (45.7–182.9 meters), with concentrations in certain locations in 30–45 fathoms (54.9– 82.9 m; Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council (SAFMC) manages speckled hind (Epinephelus drummondhayi) and warsaw grouper (Hyporthodus nigritus) from federal waters at the Virginia/ North Carolina border through the Atlantic side of the Florida Keys. These stocks are listed as undergoing overfishing, with an unknown overfished status [1]. A recent study [10] sampled 1,365 speckled hind (1977–2007) from North Carolina to central Florida and revealed trends suggesting speckled hind are overfished and undergoing overfishing, including increasing fishing mortality rate, decreasing size-at-age, and reduced numbers of mature individuals. There is a broad scientific and management interest in the development of effective and efficient regulations to reduce bycatch mortality and promote the rebuilding for these stocks

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