Assessment of Four Major Fish Species Stocks in the Lithuanian and Russian Parts of Curonian Lagoon (SE Baltic Sea) Using CMSY Method

Fisheries in the Curonian Lagoon (1584 km<sup>2</sup> coastal lagoon in South-East Baltic) can be classified as artisanal, small-scale, multi-species, and multi-gear. Such types of fisheries are characterised as data-poor and require appropriate investigation methods. We used CMSY (versi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vaidotas Andrašūnas, Edgaras Ivanauskas, Arvydas Švagždys, Artūras Razinkovas-Baziukas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-01-01
Series:Fishes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2410-3888/7/1/9
Description
Summary:Fisheries in the Curonian Lagoon (1584 km<sup>2</sup> coastal lagoon in South-East Baltic) can be classified as artisanal, small-scale, multi-species, and multi-gear. Such types of fisheries are characterised as data-poor and require appropriate investigation methods. We used CMSY (version CMSY_2019_9f. R) to assess maximum sustainable yield (MSY) and related indicators for freshwater bream, roach, pike-perch, and European perch. A decline in pike-perch and roach was identified, while the stocks of freshwater bream and European perch were sustained. As the CMSY model does not consider the impact of environmental factors, the decline in roach stock may be attributed to the increase in salinity rather than to overfishing. In the case of freshwater bream and pike-perch, the method cannot consider the increase of the percentage of small-sized fishes in catches due to the allowance of low-selectivity gears in the fishery. Additionally, in the case of the pike-perch, the model does not take into account the interannual fluctuations in the stock-recruitment system. The assessment of the European perch stock can be considered to be good. However, the accuracy of CMSY is limited, and it should be used for fisheries management only in combination with other methods.
ISSN:2410-3888