Dp. Swain et Af. Sinclair, FISH DISTRIBUTION AND CATCHABILITY - WHAT IS THE APPROPRIATE MEASURE OF DISTRIBUTION, Canadian journal of fisheries and aquatic sciences, 51(5), 1994, pp. 1046-1054
Catchability to commercial fisheries has been predicted to be density
dependent due to density-dependent variation in stock area. Previous s
tudies have used indices of stock area based on thresholds of absolute
density. These indices will increase with abundance even if density i
ncreases uniformly over all areas. We show that spatially uniform chan
ges in abundance can affect catchability given certain models for the
distribution of fishing effort, but that this effect is slight compare
d with the effect of changes in the spatial spread of fish distributio
n. We describe an index of distribution that depends only on spatial s
pread: the minimum area over which a specified percentage of the popul
ation is spread. We tested the density dependence of this index using
data on Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in the southern Gulf of St. Lawren
ce. Results depended on the percentage of the population for which the
index was evaluated. The area containing most (90 or 95%) of the popu
lation was density dependent, expanding as population size increased.
The area of highest cod concentration (i.e., the area containing 50% o
f the population) did not expand significantly as population size incr
eased.