2021
DOI: 10.1111/faf.12592
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Estimating fine‐scale movement rates and habitat preferences using multiple data sources

Abstract: Fisheries scientists and managers must track rapid shifts in fish spatial distribution to mitigate stakeholder conflict and optimize survey designs, and these spatial shifts result in part from animal movement. Information regarding animal movement can be obtained from selection experiments, tagging studies, flux through movement gates (e.g. acoustic arrays), fishery catch-per-unit effort (CPUE), resource surveys and genetic/chemical markers. However, there are few accessible approaches to combine these data t… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The proposed estimators are limited to detecting parental movements on a period between breeding seasons in the given populations. Thus, the estimation of fine-scale spatiotemporal movements, which is available to integrate data sources (Thorson et al, 2021), is beyond the scope of this paper. Although population dynamics models with coarser spatial resolution than the spatial scale of environmental layers are frequently used in assessment models, i.e., the target application of the proposed method, the proposed estimators require pre-specification of the population structure.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The proposed estimators are limited to detecting parental movements on a period between breeding seasons in the given populations. Thus, the estimation of fine-scale spatiotemporal movements, which is available to integrate data sources (Thorson et al, 2021), is beyond the scope of this paper. Although population dynamics models with coarser spatial resolution than the spatial scale of environmental layers are frequently used in assessment models, i.e., the target application of the proposed method, the proposed estimators require pre-specification of the population structure.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Essentially, there are two approaches to estimate the contemporary migration rate. The first approach involves using the mark-recapture (MR) method, which estimates the migration rate along with other population parameters (Kéry & Schaub, 2011; Thorson et al, 2021). Here, the rational is that, for example, conventional tags provide release and recovery location information for known release and recovery dates, which generates a movement fraction matrix among strata per given time interval.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Population spatial structure is influenced by the marine biophysical environment (e.g., currents, temperature, prey, and predators), fish behavior (e.g., habitat preferences, dispersal, and movement), and fishing patterns, which can manifest in an array of biogeographic patterns (Cadrin 2020 ). Spatiotemporal (including species distribution) models can elucidate local and broad-scale distributions, while linking population dynamics to environment or habitat variables (Thorson 2019b ; Thorson et al 2021 ). On the other hand, spatially-stratified models can account for population structure and broad-scale spatial dynamics (Goethel et al 2011 ; Sippel et al 2015 ).…”
Section: Current Challenges and Emerging Solutions For Provision Of E...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Multiscalar, modular, and hybrid (i.e., cross-framework) modeling approaches will continue to gain traction as facets of each framework are borrowed and shared. For example, by using hybrid modeling approaches, the multiscalar nature of common data sources (e.g., fine-scale biologging data and broad-scale historical fishery data) and population processes can be explicitly addressed, while also adjusting to the scale of management (e.g., by embedding spatiotemporal sub-models within coarser resolution spatially stratified assessments; Thorson et al 2021 ). Similarly, wider incorporation of state-space frameworks that utilize spatial and temporal random effects and spatial autocorrelation will aid implementation of spatially explicit assessment approaches by reducing the number of effective parameters (e.g., Cao et al 2020 ).…”
Section: Current Challenges and Emerging Solutions For Provision Of E...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Essentially, there are two primary approaches to estimating the contemporary migration rate. The first approach involves using the mark–recapture (MR) method, which estimates the migration rate and other population parameters (Kéry & Schaub, 2011; Thorson et al, 2021). Here, the rationale is that, for example, conventional tags provide release and recovery location information for known release and recovery dates, which generates a movement fraction matrix among strata per the given time interval.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%