Journal article

Estimating maturity from size-at-age data: Are real-world fisheries datasets up to the task?

Henry F Wootton, John R Morrongiello, Asta Audzijonyte

REVIEWS IN FISH BIOLOGY AND FISHERIES | SPRINGER | Published : 2020

Open access

Abstract

The size and age at which individuals mature is rapidly changing due to plastic and evolved responses to fisheries harvest and global warming. Understanding the nature of these changes is essential because maturity schedules are critical in determining population demography and ultimately, the economic value and viability of fisheries. Detecting maturity changes is, however, practically difficult and costly. A recently proposed biphasic growth modelling likelihood profiling method offers great potential as it can statistically estimate age-at-maturity from population-level size-at-age data, using the change-point in growth that occurs at maturity. Yet, the performance of the method on typica..

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University of Melbourne Researchers