Implementing two-dimensional autocorrelation in either survival or natural mortality improves a state-space assessment model for Southern New England-Mid Atlantic yellowtail flounder

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2021.105873Get rights and content
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Abstract

Survival is an important population process in fisheries stock assessment models and is typically treated as deterministic. Recently developed state-space assessment models can estimate stochastic deviations in survival, which represent variability in some ambiguous combination of natural mortality (M), fishing mortality (F), and migration. These survival deviations are generally treated as independent by age and year, despite our understanding that many population processes can be autocorrelated and that not accounting for autocorrelation can result in notable bias. We address these concerns, as well as the strong retrospective pattern found in the last assessment of Southern New England yellowtail flounder (Limanda ferruginea), by incorporating two-dimensional (2D, age and year) first-order autocorrelation in survival and M. We found that deviations were autocorrelated among both years (0.53 ± 0.09, 0.63 ± 0.16) and ages (0.33 ± 0.12, 0.40 ± 0.16) when estimated for survival or M, respectively. Models with 2D autocorrelation on survival or M fit the data better and had reduced retrospective pattern than models without autocorrelation. The best fit model included 2D autocorrelated deviations in survival as well as independent deviations in M and altered estimates of spawning stock biomass by 18 % and F by 21 % in model years. In short-term projections with F = 0, including 2D autocorrelation in survival or M reduced spawning stock biomass by 48 %. We conclude that incorporating 2D autocorrelated variation in survival or M could improve the assessment of Southern New England yellowtail flounder in terms of model fit and consistency of biomass projections.

Keywords

State-space model
Stock assessment
Random effects
Survival
Natural mortality
Autocorrelation
Yellowtail flounder

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