Age class structure

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

fisheries
science
water column
marine snow
upwelling
shelf pump
oceanic gyres
humboldt current
eutrophication
acidification
dead zone
red tide
biomass
baseline
population
measurement
bioeconomics
marine biology
oceanography
conservation
GLOBEC
personalities
research institutes

sustainablity
fishing
This box: view  talk  edit

Age class structure in fisheries and wildlife management is a part of population assessment. Age can be determined by counting growth rings in fish scales, otoliths, cross-sections of fin spines for species with thick spines such as triggerfish, or teeth for a few species. Each method has its merits and drawbacks. Fish scales are easiest to obtain, but may be unreliable if scales have fallen off of the fish and new ones grown in their places. Fin spines may be unreliable for the same reason, and most fish do not have spines of sufficient thickness for clear rings to be visible. Otoliths will have stayed with the fish throughout its life history, but obtaining them requires killing the fish. Also, otoliths often require more preparation before ageing can occur.

[edit] Analyzing fisheries age class structure

An age class structure with gaps in it, for instance a regular bell curve for the population of 1-5 year-old fish, excepting a very low population for the 3-year-olds, implies a bad spawning year 3 years ago in that species.

Often fish in younger age class structures have very low numbers because they were small enough to slip through the sampling nets, and may in fact have a very healthy population.

[edit] See also


This ecology-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.