The effectiveness of using CPUE data derived from Vessel Monitoring Systems and fisheries logbooks to estimate scallop biomass
ICES Journal of
Marine Science
ICES Journal of Marine Science (2013), 70(7), 1330– 1340. doi:10.1093/icesjms/fst099
The effectiveness of using CPUE data derived from Vessel
Monitoring Systems and fisheries logbooks to estimate
scallop biomass
Lee G. Murray*, Hilmar Hinz, Natalie Hold, and Michel J. Kaiser
School of Ocean Sciences, Bangor University, Askew Street, Menai Bridge, Anglesey, LL59 5AB, UK
*Corresponding Author: tel: +44 (0) 1248 388 390; fax: +44 (0) 1248 716367; e-mail:
Murray, L. G., Hinz, H., Hold, N., and Kaiser, M. J. 2013. The effectiveness of using CPUE data derived from Vessel Monitoring Systems and fisheries
logbooks to estimate scallop biomass. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 70: 1330 – 1340.
Received 19 November 2012; accepted 26 April 2013; advance access publication 21 July 2013.
Obtaining accurate data on abundance is vital to undertaking viable stock assessments of commercially exploited species. Satellite Vessel
Monitoring Systems (VMSs) combined with fisheries logbooks have the potential to provide an abundant source of data with greater spatial
and temporal coverage than research surveys. However, to date it has not been demonstrated how well VMS-derived abundance or biomass
indices reflect research survey results. In this study we compared biomass indices of scallops derived from (i) fishing vessel surveys, (ii) research vessel surveys, and (iii) fishery-dependent data using VMSs and logbooks. In most cases there were strong relationships between
biomass indices of Pecten maximus from fishing vessels and the research vessel. There were stronger relationships between P. maximus
biomass indices from fishery-dependent VMS and logbook data and research vessel data at the beginning of the fishing season, when abundance was higher, but weaker relationships at the end of the fishing season. The time and location of sampling affected biomass estimates
over short periods, and without standardizing to location and vessel, biomass depletion was masked. Fishery-dependent data provides a
valid means of assessing relative scallop abundance and may prove equally viable in other fisheries with appropriate standardization of
Catch Per Unit Effort (CPUE) data, making real-time management of fisheries increasingly feasible.
Keywords: Catch Per Unit Effort, fishery-dependent data, Pecten maximus, standardization, stock assessment, VMS.
Introduction
Satellite Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) data can be used to define
fishing grounds (Gerritsen and Lordan, 2011; Jennings and Lee,
2012), to assess the impacts of fishing activity on benthic habitats
(Witt and Godley, 2007; Hinz et al., 2009; Lambert et al., 2011;
Lambert et al., 2012), to examine fisher behaviour (Murray et al.,
2011), and ultimately to improve fisheries management (Chang,
2011). Since VMS records do not provide a direct measure of
fishing effort, some specific considerations need to be addressed
when using VMS data. As such, several studies have examined different methods of processing and analysing VMS data to estimate
fishing effort (Mills et al., 2007; Walter et al., 2007; Lambert et al.,
2012). However, VMS data are not yet widely used in stock assessments, due largely to the lack of time-series of sufficient length
(ICES, 2011).
An ICES study group was established to address the need for a
structured approach to storing and accessing VMS data (ICES,
2010). Furthermore, VMS records can be joined to fisheries logbooks to provide more accurate estimates of fishing effort (Deng
et al., 2005; Bastardie et al., 2010; Lee et al., 2010; Gerritsen and
Lordan, 2011; Murray et al., 2011; Lambert et al., 2012). Thus a
“VMS tools” package has been created to allow VMS data to be
linked to logbook data, and to facilitate processing of these data
(Hintzen et al., 2012). As longer time-series of VMS and logbook
data become available, fishery-dependent Catch Per Unit Effort
(CPUE) data are likely to be used much more regularly to assess
the status of populations, as it is a cost-effective method of providing
year-round data across the majority of a fishing fleet. Therefore, it is
important that the accuracy of these data, at least relative to traditional survey methods, is verified.
Obtaining accurate abundance indices is a prerequisite to undertaking useful stock assessments. Although the collection of CPUE
data is relatively simple, they may not exhibit a linear relationship
with abundance. Hyperstability, where abundance declines more
# 2013 International Council for the Exploration of the Sea. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
For Permissions, please email:
Estimating scallop biomass from CPUE data
rapidly than CPUE (Hilborn and Walters, 1992), is a common property of CPUE indices (Harley et al., 2001), due largely to targeting
behaviour of fishers, technological change or vessel effects
(Bishop, 2006; Quirijns et al., 2008; Erisman et al., 2011).
Therefore, VMS- and logbook-derived data may need to be corrected for these variables before being used as abundance indices.
The standardization of CPUE data can have a significant effect on
estimates of relative abundance (Carruthers et al., 2011).
Underfitting of standardization models to fishery-dependent data
can also lead to biased estimates (Ye and Dennis, 2009), and a lack
of data from unfished, or rarely fished, areas over which a population
extends can lead to inaccurate population size estimates (Campbell,
2004). There are also problems associated with using fisheryindependent data. Although fishery-independent surveys can be
designed to avoid bias and reduce uncertainties, conversion coefficients may be required when different vessels are used (Dare et al.,
1994; Pelletier, 1998). Moreover, due to their expense, research
vessel surveys usually sample only a relatively small area of a
fishery during a limited number of sampling events. Therefore,
both fishery-dependent and fishery-independent CPUE estimates
may differ from true abundance. Consequently, VMS and logbook
data are potentially a valuable source of information on the status
of exploited populations due to the quantity of data but require appropriate processing and standardization.
The availability of VMS and logbook data provides an opportunity to respond to the results of stock assessments with spatial management at a local and regional level. At a local level, vessels could be
directed to the most profitable (high abundance) areas and advised
against or prevented from fishing in low-abundance areas before
abundance reaches uneconomical levels. The margins above these
uneconomical levels could be governed by wider-scale stock assessments. Even if total allowable catches (or equivalent caps) are not
strictly adhered to, such an approach should facilitate more efficient
exploitation of scallop stocks than at present.
The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of using VMS
and logbook data to obtain biomass indices for scallops. We examined three methods o (...truncated)