School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
Aquaculture & Fisheries Development Centre, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
PLoS One. 2018 Sep 11;13(9):e0203122. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0203122. eCollection 2018.
There is worldwide concern about the status of elasmobranchs, primarily as a result of overfishing and bycatch with subsequent ecosystem effects following the removal of top predators. Whilst abundant and wide-ranging, blue sharks (Prionace glauca) are the most heavily exploited shark species having suffered marked declines over the past decades, and there is a call for robust abundance estimates. In this study, we utilized depth data collected from two blue sharks using pop-up satellite archival tags, and modelled the proportion of time the sharks were swimming in the top 1-meter layer and could therefore be detected by observers conducting aerial surveys. The availability models indicated that the tagged sharks preferred surface waters whilst swimming over the continental shelf and during daytime, with a model-predicted average proportion of time spent at the surface of 0.633 (SD = 0.094) for on-shelf, and 0.136 (SD = 0.075) for off-shelf. These predicted values were then used to account for availability bias in abundance estimates for the species over a large area in the Northeast Atlantic, derived through distance sampling using aerial survey data collected in 2015 and 2016 and modelled with density surface models. Further, we compared abundance estimates corrected with model-predicted availability to uncorrected estimates and to estimates that incorporated the average time the sharks were available for detection. The mean abundance (number of individuals) corrected with modelled availability was 15,320 (CV = 0.28) in 2015 and 11,001 (CV = 0.27) in 2016. Depending on the year, these estimates were ~7 times higher compared to estimates without the bias correction, and ~3 times higher compared to the abundances corrected with average availability. When the survey area contains habitat heterogeneity that may affect surfacing patterns of animals, modelling animals' availability provides a robust alternative to correcting for availability bias and highlights the need for caution when applying "average" correction factors.
人们普遍关注鲨鱼的生存状况,主要是因为过度捕捞和随之而来的顶级掠食者被移除后对生态系统的影响。虽然蓝鲨(Prionace glauca)数量丰富、分布广泛,但作为被过度捕捞的鲨鱼物种之一,其数量在过去几十年中显著减少,因此需要对其种群数量进行准确估计。在这项研究中,我们利用两个带有弹出式卫星档案标签的蓝鲨的数据,建立了模型来计算鲨鱼在顶层 1 米水层游泳的时间比例,以及因此可被进行空中调查的观察员检测到的时间比例。结果表明,标签鲨鱼在游泳时更喜欢表层水域,尤其是在大陆架上和白天,模型预测在表层的平均时间比例为 0.633(SD = 0.094),在大陆架上为 0.136(SD = 0.075)。然后,我们将这些预测值用于在东北大西洋的大片区域中,对 2015 年和 2016 年使用空中调查数据并通过密度表面模型进行建模的距离抽样估算的物种丰度进行可用性偏差校正。此外,我们将用模型预测的可用性校正的丰度估计值与未校正的估计值以及包含鲨鱼可检测时间平均值的估计值进行了比较。2015 年和 2016 年用模型校正的丰度(个体数量)分别为 15320(CV = 0.28)和 11001(CV = 0.27)。与没有进行偏差校正的估计值相比,这两个年份的估计值分别增加了约 7 倍,与用平均可用性校正的丰度相比,分别增加了约 3 倍。当调查区域存在可能影响动物浮出水面模式的生境异质性时,用模型计算动物的可用性为校正可用性偏差提供了一种稳健的替代方法,并强调在应用“平均”校正因子时需要谨慎。