Abstract

Abstract The adoption of the Precautionary Approach requires providing advice that is robust to uncertainty. Therefore, when conducting stock assessment alternative, model structures and data sets are commonly considered. The primary diagnostics used to compare models are to examine residuals patterns to check goodness-of-fit and to conduct retrospective analysis to check the stability of estimates. However, residual patterns can be removed by adding more parameters than justified by the data, and retrospective patterns removed by ignoring the data. Therefore, neither alone can be used for validation, which requires assessing whether it is plausible that a system identical to the model generated the data. Therefore, we use hindcasting to estimate prediction skill, a measure of the accuracy of a predicted value unknown by the model relative to its observed value, to explore model misspecification and data conflicts. We compare alternative model structures based on integrated statistical and Bayesian state-space biomass dynamic models using, as an example, Indian Ocean yellowfin tuna. Validation is not a binary process (i.e. pass or fail) but a continuum; therefore, we discuss the use of prediction skill to identify alternative hypotheses, weight ensemble models and agree on reference sets of operating models when conducting Management Strategy Evaluation.

Highlights

  • Fisheries management relies upon stock assessment to provide advice

  • For statistical model (SS), a negative bias is seen in spawning stock biomass (SSB)/SSBMSY for one-step ahead, while for threesteps ahead, SSB is overestimated in the recent period little change is seen in the estimates of F/FMSY

  • JABBA shows a negative pattern for harvest rate, which increases for three-step ahead forecast

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Summary

Introduction

Fisheries management relies upon stock assessment to provide advice. There are various definitions of stock assessment The reasoning for this is because it explicitly recognizes that the main aim of a stock assessment is to provide the basis for long-term sustainable management. The adoption of the Precautionary Approach to fisheries management (PA; FAO, 1996) requires a formal consideration of uncertainty, which is increasingly being addressed by conducting stock assessment using alternative modelling frameworks conditioned on a variety of assumptions and data sets.

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