Seafloor mapping for fisheries management: MSA requirements and the NEFMC’s SASI model Chad Demarest Integrating Seafloor Mapping & Benthic Ecology Into.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ecosystem Processes ECOSYSTEM DEFINITION
Advertisements

Evaluate Spawning of Fall Chinook and Chum Salmon Just Below the Four Lowermost Columbia River Mainstem Dams Project PNNL.
A Framework for Ecosystem Impacts Assessment Using an Indicator Approach Patricia A. Livingston 1, K. Aydin 1, J. Boldt 2, J. Ianelli 1, and J. Jurado-Molina.
Environmental impacts of incidents SPEAKER NAME SPEAKER APPOINTMENT National Contingency Plan – Environment Group Training.
Habitat mapping needs under the EFH provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act David Stevenson, NOAA Fisheries Service Chad Demarest, New England Fishery Mgmt.
Geoscience and Ocean Management: Queen Charlotte Basin western Canada GeoHab 2003 May 2, 2003 J. Vaughn Barrie 1, Kim Conway 1, Manfred Krautter 2 and.
APRIL 15-16, 2009 Portland, Maine Hosted by: GULF OF MAINE RESEARCH INSTITUTE & GULF OF MAINE MAPPING INITIATIVE.
Sections 10 and 404: NMFS’ Oversight, Concerns and Actions
2. Fisheries management and the Ecosystem approach
Welcome North Devon Case Study Stakeholder Workshop 3 The Civic Centre, Barnstaple – 10 th April 2014.
Lec 12: Rapid Bioassessment Protocols (RBP’s)
How fishing gears affect the ecosystem
Seafloor Ecology How to study the marine environment and the importance of habitats and food webs.
Future Research NeedsWorld Heritage and Climate Change World Heritage and Climate Change - Future Research Needs Bastian Bomhard World Heritage Officer.
The Water Withdrawal Assessment Process Context within regional water policy discussions Context within regional water policy discussions –Aquatic ecosystems.
Incorporating Ecosystem Objectives into Fisheries Management
Preventing Endangered Species Listings with the Tongass Conservation Strategy Steve Brockmann U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
1 Proposed Revisions to the National Standard 1 Guidelines: Adding Guidance on Annual Catch Limits and Other Requirements Presentation to the Regional.
Essential Fish Habitat Conservation
Integrating Seafloor Mapping & Benthic Ecology into Fisheries Management in the Gulf of Maine April 15 th Breakout Group Summary Group 2—Conference Rm.
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Management and Conservation Act 1956 as amended Ch 4 Mod 4 HO # 12 Essential Fish Habitat 1.
Computer modelling ecosystem processes and change Lesson 8 Presentation 1.
Terms of Reference #5 and #7 Overview/Relation to Management Deirdre Boelke, NEFMC Staff, Scallop PDT Chair March 17-19, 2015.
Endangered Species Act Section 7 Consultations. The Endangered Species Act Sec. 2:Purpose Sec. 3:Definitions Sec. 4:Listing, Recovery, Monitoring Sec.
Partnership  excellence  growth Vulnerability: Concepts and applications to coral reef-dependent regions (Work in progress) Allison Perry.
Bioregionalisation of the Southern Ocean – conservation applications & data needs Susie Grant British Antarctic Survey
David Connor, JNCC, UK HELCOM Red List habitat workshop, March 2010, Stockholm.
Nautilus (Dr M. Norman, Museum Victoria) Butterfly fish & Yellowback Fusiliners (R.Thorn) Soft coral and diver (M. Ball) Tiger Anemone (L. Wiseman) Whale.
Coastal and Marine Ecological Classification Standard (CMECS) FGDC Standards Working Group July 7, 2010.
Chesapeake Bay Fishery- Independent Multispecies Survey (CHESFIMS) T. J. Miller 1, C. J. Heyer 1, E. D. Houde 1,A. F. Sharov 2, B. Muffley 2, M. C. Christman.
ODFW Habitat Mitigation Policy and Energy Facility Siting.
What Does it Mean When >80 Equals Spotted Owl Habitat?
The management of small pelagics. Comprise the 1/3 of the total world landings Comprise more than 50% of the total Mediterranean landings, while Two species,
Washington Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research Unit
EFH Update Caribbean Fishery Management Council 145 th March St. Croix USVI.
Population Ecology. Population Essential Questions What factors influence populations in ecosystems? How do human population dynamics affect the world.
Phil Hurvitz Avian Conservation Lab Meeting 8. March. 2002
Structure and Function of Marine Ecosystems Steven Murawski Ph.D. Director, Office of Science & Technology National Marine Fisheries Service  Challenges.
Case Study Development of an Index of Biotic Integrity for the Mid-Atlantic Highland Region McCormick et al
August 1 st Draft of Offshore Aquaculture Amendment Gulf Council Meeting August 11-15, 2008 Key Largo, FL Tab J, No. 6.
Essential Fish Habitat NOAA / National Marine Fisheries Service Office of Habitat Conservation 1.
Management of the coastal and marine environment: The legal framework of the European Union from the first EEC Directives to the Water Framework Directive.
Steve Todd WetSAG co-chair Suquamish Tribe Ash Roorbach CMER Riparian Ecologist August 5, 2010.
WP6 trends in biodiversity - Review impacts - Explore trends in catch data - Explore trends in survey data - Options for assessing trends in invertebrates.
Fishing and Habitat Integrity Leonie Dransfeld D3+ workshop April 2014.
13. Sediment and aquatic habitat in rivers (a)Benthic organisms and bed sediments (b)Fish and bed sediments (c)Reach classification based on bed material.
Environmental Flow Instream Flow “Environmental flow” is the term for the amount of water needed in a watercourse to maintain healthy, natural ecosystems.
GULF OF MAINE MAPPING INITIATIVE: A FRAMEWORK FOR REGIONAL FISHERIES RESEARCH AND MANAGEMENT Sara Ellis 1, Thomas Noji 2, Susan Snow-Cotter 3, Brian Todd.
Data requirement of stock assessment. Data used in stock assessments can be classified as fishery-dependent data or fishery-independent data. Fishery-dependent.
PRINCIPLES OF STOCK ASSESSMENT. Aims of stock assessment The overall aim of fisheries science is to provide information to managers on the state and life.
How do we work… Samuli Korpinen, Finnish Environment Institute, Marine Research Centre HELCOM BalticBOOST WS on Physical loss and damage to the seafloor.
Helsinki, Finland, November 2016
ICT Technical Documentation and Flow Chart
Samuli Korpinen, nd BalticBOOST Theme 3 WS
EU FP7 BENTHIS & EU-HELCOM BalticBOOST
IBFMPs Goals and Objectives
Deltares, Delft, Netherland
Final ESA Listing Determination for Nassau Grouper
Fundamentals of Ecology
PROVISIONS OF H.R
Feedback received on the establishment of fisheries management measures in Natura 2000 sites (Document 4.1) Exchange information on ongoing activities.
Annex III Annex I Qualitative descriptors Characteristics
Zooniverse Safari on the Serengeti! Observing and identifying species.
EEA - EMMA Workshop November 20-21, 2006 EEA, Copenhagen
Reporting Synergies: MSFD & BHD Miraine Rizzo, Matthew Grima Connell & Luke Tabone Biodiversity & Water Unit Environment & Resources Authority - Malta.
Proposed plan of work for ICES CIS contribution
EU request on indicators of the pressure and impact of bottom-contacting fishing gear on the seabed, and of trade-offs in the catch and the value of.
Marine Environment and Water Industry
Essential Fish Habitat
Essential Fish Habitat
Presentation transcript:

Seafloor mapping for fisheries management: MSA requirements and the NEFMC’s SASI model Chad Demarest Integrating Seafloor Mapping & Benthic Ecology Into Fisheries Management Portland, ME April 15, 2009

Objective Describe the NEFMC’s use of seafloor maps and benthic ecology in meeting the MSA’s requirements to minimize to the extent practicable the adverse effects of fishing on EFH

The MSA requires FMP’s to: 1.Describe and identify essential fish habitat (EFH) for every fishery 2.Minimize to the extent practicable the adverse impacts of fishing on EFH 3.List the major prey species for the species in the FMU and discuss their location 4.Identify non-fishing activities that may adversely affect EFH

What is EFH? “The term ‘essential fish habitat’ means those waters and substrate necessary to fish for spawning, breeding, feeding or growth to maturity.” MSA, 2006

The Final Rule “Adverse effect means any impact that reduces quality and/or quantity of EFH” “Councils must act to prevent, mitigate, or minimize any adverse effects from fishing, to the extent practicable, if there is evidence that a fishing activity adversely affects EFH in a manner that is more than minimal and not temporary in nature.”

More Guidelines “Loss of prey may be an adverse effect on EFH… Therefore, actions that reduce the availability of a major prey species, either through direct harm or capture, or through adverse impacts to the prey species’ habitat that are known to cause a reduction in the population of the prey species, may be considered adverse effects on EFH if such actions reduce the quality of EFH”

And yet more Guidelines “Adverse effects may include direct or indirect physical, chemical, or biological alterations of the waters or substrate and loss of, or injury to, benthic organisms, prey species and their habitat, and other ecosystem components, if such modifications reduce the quality and/or quantity of EFH.” “Adverse effects to EFH may result from actions occurring within EFH or outside of EFH and may include site specific or habitat-wide impacts, including individual, cumulative, or synergistic consequences of actions.”

NEFMC Objectives Identify all major fishing threats to the EFH of those species managed by the Council Identify and implement mechanisms to protect, conserve, and enhance the EFH of those species managed by the Council to the extent practicable. Define measurable thresholds for achieving the requirements to minimize adverse impacts to the extent practicable Integrate and optimize measures to minimize the adverse impacts to EFH across all Council managed FMPs

The SASI model

Model components 1.Tow distance 2.Effective linear gear width 3.Gear component contact index 4.Gear component sensitivity index

Tow distance and gear widths are modeled for nine primary gear types based on empirical data (observer, VTR, VMS) Contact indices are categorically defined Sensitivity indices are calculated as a function of habitat and gear-specific susceptibility and recovery values

Sensitivity is defined here as a combination of the effects of a fishing gear on the functional value provided by a unit of habitat (Susceptibility), and the recovery in functional value that unit of habitat will experience after the gear effect has passed (Recovery) Sensitivity = ƒ (Susceptibility, Recovery) where Susceptibility and Recovery are known to vary across: –Habitats –Energy environments –Fishing gears Sensitivity indices

1.Habitats Consistent with literature review of fishing gear impacts Substrate as primary impact surface Inferred ‘features’ consistent with underlying substrates 2.Energy environments Classified high or low based on: critical shear stress model depth 3.Fishing gears Gear types and area swept based on spatially- delineated commercial fisheries data

Assessment matrices All cells assessed (hypothetical interactions) Susceptibility independent of energy, but recovery not

Gear type (9) 1 Substrate (5) 2 Energy (2) 3 Region (2) 4 Feature typeFeatureGear effectsSusceptibilityRecoveryStudies considered Geological Featureless x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Biogenic depressions x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Biogenic burrows x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Special-case biogenic burrows x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Scattered gravel x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Gravel pavement x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Gravel piles x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Shell debris x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Biological Sponges x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Hydroids x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Anemones x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Anemones, burrowing x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Soft corals and gorgonians x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Sea pens x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Hard corals x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Colonial tube worms x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Amphipods, tube building x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Bivalves x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Bryozoans x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Brachiopods x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Ascidians x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Macroalgae x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c… Sea grass x, y, z… 0-3 a, b, c…

Mapping habitats for SASI Data sources: usSEABED (extracted and parsed) SMAST video survey NOAA trawl survey hangs (codes 5 & 9)

Substrate class Substrate subclass Particle size range (mm) Corresponding Wentworth class Mud Clay-silt < Clay – Silt Muddy-sand< Clay to sand Sand Sand/sand ripple – 2Sand Granule-pebble 2-4Gravel 4 – 64Pebble Cobble64 – 256Cobble Boulder> 256Boulder

Vorinoi tessellations allow the size of the unit area to vary in proportion to the density of data available, producing irregular shaped polygons of varying sizes Unstructured grid

Energy environments Environments with different energy characteristics are created by the flow of water over habitats These energy environments affect the: –nature of fishing gear impacts (i.e. loss of functional value) –susceptibility of habitats to fishing gears –habitat recovery rates

Applying the SASI model spatially The model represents a quality-adjusted area of seabed impacted by NE gears per spatial unit (e.g. tms, 5k grid) The Sensitivity Index (e.g., S o, S c, S s ) is derived from matrices specific to a combination of gear type / habitat / energy; they apply uniformly across gear components

Groundfish trawl Se

End products 1.Matrices summarizing the hypothetical sensitivity of habitat components to fishing gears 2.Maps depicting the realized vulnerability of habitat area units to fishing gears, as measured by quality-adjusted m 2 and summed across all gears fishing in each area 3.Assessment of adverse effects based on pre-determined thresholds

Alternative impacts analysis Matrices and SASI allow PDT to quantify and visualize changes in quality-adjusted seabed impacts, enabling analysis of: Area-based fishing restrictions (mapping hypothetical or re-directed fishing effort) Gear modifications (changing SASI contact and sensitivity indices)