SMAST Seminar - DFO - "Diverse uses for Species Distribution Models (SDMs) in New England fisheries management" by: Michelle Bachman
When: Wednesday,
November 27, 2024
3:00 PM
-
4:00 PM
Where: > See description for location
Description: Department of Fisheries Oceanography
"Diverse uses for Species Distribution Models (SDMs) in New England fisheries management"
Michelle Bachman
Lead Fishery Analyst, NEFMC
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
3pm-4pm
SMAST E 101-102 and via Zoom
Abstract:
Species Distribution Models (SDMs) combine presence / absence or relative abundance data from fishery-independent surveys with environmental data to predict the probability of marine fish and shellfish species occurrence through space and time. Using Community Basis Function Modeling techniques (Hui et al. 2023), offshore and inshore fish survey data, and a diverse suite of environmental predictors, we are estimating distributions for New England Council and Mid-Atlantic Council managed species and other abundant species in the Northeast U.S. Shelf Ecosystem. A solid understanding of current species distributions and the factors that influence them is essential to fisheries management decision-making in an era of climate change.
We envision diverse applications for model outputs that aim to improve the responsiveness and resilience of fisheries management. The initial application for these model outputs is revising essential fish habitat designation maps. The Council's essential fish habitat designations support fisheries management decisions as well as consultations on non-fishing projects that are likely to impact fish habitats, and, by extension, fishery resources and fisheries. The three climate-resilience applications are: (1) identifying considerations for designating ecosystem component species in our fishery management plans, (2) developing revisions to governance approaches to account for current vs. historic species distributions, and (3) evaluating the results of portfolio analyses that will be used to identify opportunities and gaps in our management system, for example how fishing permits are structured.
This talk will briefly describe our modeling approach and share how the results will be applied to each of these four projects. Potential future updates to these SDMs will also be noted.
Join the Zoom
Note: Meeting passcode required, email contact below to receive
To request the Zoom passcode, or for any other questions, please email Callie Rumbut at c.rumbut@umassd.edu
"Diverse uses for Species Distribution Models (SDMs) in New England fisheries management"
Michelle Bachman
Lead Fishery Analyst, NEFMC
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
3pm-4pm
SMAST E 101-102 and via Zoom
Abstract:
Species Distribution Models (SDMs) combine presence / absence or relative abundance data from fishery-independent surveys with environmental data to predict the probability of marine fish and shellfish species occurrence through space and time. Using Community Basis Function Modeling techniques (Hui et al. 2023), offshore and inshore fish survey data, and a diverse suite of environmental predictors, we are estimating distributions for New England Council and Mid-Atlantic Council managed species and other abundant species in the Northeast U.S. Shelf Ecosystem. A solid understanding of current species distributions and the factors that influence them is essential to fisheries management decision-making in an era of climate change.
We envision diverse applications for model outputs that aim to improve the responsiveness and resilience of fisheries management. The initial application for these model outputs is revising essential fish habitat designation maps. The Council's essential fish habitat designations support fisheries management decisions as well as consultations on non-fishing projects that are likely to impact fish habitats, and, by extension, fishery resources and fisheries. The three climate-resilience applications are: (1) identifying considerations for designating ecosystem component species in our fishery management plans, (2) developing revisions to governance approaches to account for current vs. historic species distributions, and (3) evaluating the results of portfolio analyses that will be used to identify opportunities and gaps in our management system, for example how fishing permits are structured.
This talk will briefly describe our modeling approach and share how the results will be applied to each of these four projects. Potential future updates to these SDMs will also be noted.
Join the Zoom
Note: Meeting passcode required, email contact below to receive
To request the Zoom passcode, or for any other questions, please email Callie Rumbut at c.rumbut@umassd.edu
Contact: > See Description for contact information
Topical Areas: Faculty, SMAST, Staff and Administrators, Students, Graduate, Biology, STEM Education, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Graduate Studies, STEM, Lectures and Seminars