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Benchmark Workshop on Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) in the North Atlantic (WKBSALMON)

Year of publication

2023

Authors

Perälä, Tommi; White, Jonathan; Adams, Grant; April, Julien; Bárðarson, Hlynur; Ahlbeck Bergendahl, Ida; Bolstad, Geir; Breau, Cindy; Bull, Colin; Chaput, Gerald; Cooper, Anne; Dauphin, Guillaume; Erkinaro, Jaakko; Gillson, Jonathan; Gregory, Stephen; Jepsen, Niels; Kermoade, MacKenzie; Lebot, Clément; Legault, Chris; Maxwell, Hugo; McGinnity, Philip; Meerburg, David; Millane, Michael; Nadolna-Ałtyn, Katarzyna; Olmos, Maxime; Ounsley, James; Patin, Rémi; Pedersen, Stig; Rivot, Etienne; Robertson, Martha; Sheehan, Tim; Staveley, Tom; Taylor, Andrew; Walker, Alan; Wennevik, Vidar
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Abstract

WKBSalmon reviewed the implementation of a Life Cycle Model (LCM) for wild anadromous Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) covering their natal north Atlantic range. The LCM is a time iterative, Bayesian hierarchical model incorporating salmon records of fifteen countries at 25 stock-units. It tracks salmon of two explicit sea-age streams, namely, one-sea-winter (1SW) and multi-sea-winter (MSW), stock unit specific smolt ages, numbers of salmon returning to stock-units, proportions maturing, survival at sea by month and stock unit specific post-smolt survival rates and proportion maturing at 1SW. Mixed-stock catches at West Greenland and Faroes, as well as those in North America, are designated to stock-units based on observed historic tag data, genetic identification and assumed harvest distributions. The LCM will replace three Pre-Fisheries Abundance (PFA) forecast models, aligned to three management units, one eastern North America and two Northeast Atlantic European complex-es of stock-units. The LCM enables a more comprehensive and consistent approach, account-ing for migration and maturation of salmon by stock-unit and a hierarchical (over stock-units) modelling of post-smolt survival and proportion maturing in the first year at sea. The LCM uses outputs from two “Run Reconstruction” models, one for each of eastern North America and Northeast Atlantic origin salmon. These process catch data and exploitation rates and/or returns at stock-unit spatial scales to estimate returning numbers and catches of salm-on by sea-age group. The LCM model uses a similar sea-age group structure for all stock-units resulting in a harmonized life cycle for Atlantic salmon from the North Atlantic. The LCM forecasts estimates of returning salmon by stock-unit based on the post-smolt survival and proportion maturing parameters, forecast forward as a random-walk, from the most recent observations and accounting for “banked” maturing and non-maturing salmon. Forecast returns to stock-units may be compared to Conservation Limit (CL) reference points and “Spawner Escapement Reserves” (SERs – reference points prior to any marine fishing activities) at national and international levels to quantify the risk to the salmon stocks under different mixed-fisheries catch levels. The LCM was found to provide estimates of stock status and forecasts in line with perceptions and previously used modelling frameworks and to be robust to a range of settings and uncertainties.
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Organizations and authors

Publication type

Publication format

Monograph

Audience

Professional

MINEDU's publication type classification code

D4 Published development or research report or study

Publication channel information

Journal/Series

ICES Scientific Reports

Publisher

International Council for the Exploration of the Sea

Open access

Open access in the publisher’s service

Yes

Open access of publication channel

Fully open publication channel

Self-archived

Yes

Other information

Fields of science

Ecology, evolutionary biology

Keywords

[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]

Publication country

Denmark

Internationality of the publisher

International

Language

English

International co-publication

Yes

Co-publication with a company

No

DOI

10.17895/ices.pub.24752079

The publication is included in the Ministry of Education and Culture’s Publication data collection

Yes