“…Furthermore, the predicted low level of natural mortality for age 7 fish is reasonable because bonefishes of the Genus Albula are long‐lived and specimens of >20 years have been found in unfished populations (Ault, Humston, et al, ; Ault, Moret, et al, 2007; Filous, Lennox, Coleman, et al, ), suggesting that natural mortality is less intense as the species reaches its growth asymptote and presumably becomes less vulnerable to predation (Sogard, ). On the other hand, the estimates of fishing mortality suggest that fishing mortality is negligible in age‐3 fish or less, and although some juvenile bonefish are captured in the artisanal trap fishery during high wind events, male and female bonefish are not fully recruited to the trap fishery until the age of 95% sexual maturity (A 95 ), 4 and 5 years, respectively (Filous, Lennox, Coleman, et al, ). The rapid and consistent increase in fishing mortality in age‐4 + bonefish predicted by the integrated Brownie–Petersen model is consistent with this aspect of the species life history and its interaction with the artisanal trap fishery.…”