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Monitoring Programs of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico: Inventory, Development and Use of a Large Monitoring Database to Map Fish and Invertebrate Spatial Distributions
Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries
  • Arnaud Gruss, University of Miami
  • Holly A. Perryman, University of Miami
  • Elizabeth A. Babcock, University of Miami
  • Skyler Sagarese, National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS)
  • James T. Thorson, Northwest Fisheries Science Center
  • Cameron H. Ainsworth, University of South Florida
  • Evan John Anderson, The University of Southern Mississippi
  • Kenneth Brennan, Beaufort Laboratory, NOAA-NMFS
  • Matthew D. Campbell, Mississippi Laboratories, NOAA-NMFS
  • Mary C. Christman, MCC Statistical Consulting, LLC
  • Scott Cross, NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
  • Michael Drexler, University of South Florida
  • J. Marcus Drymon, Mississippi State University
  • Chris Gardner, Panama City Laboratory, NOAA-NMFS
  • David S. Hanisko, Mississippi Laboratories, NOAA-NMFS
  • Jill Hendon, The University of Southern Mississippi
  • Christopher C. Koenig, Florida State University
  • Matthew Love, Ocean Conservancy
  • Fernando Martinez-Andrade, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Corpus Christi
  • Jack Morris, Mote Marine Laboratory
  • Brandi T. Noble, Mississippi Laboratories, NOAA-NMFS
  • Matthew A. Nuttall, University of Miami
  • Jason Osborne, Everglades National Park
  • Christy Pattengil-Semmens, Reef Environmental Education Foundation
  • Adam G. Pollack, Mississippi Laboratories, Riverside Technology, Inc., NOAA-NMFS
  • Tracey Sutton, Nova Southeastern University
  • Theodore S. Switzer, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
ORCID
0000-0002-5280-7071
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-28-2018
Keywords
  • Gap analysis,
  • Inventory,
  • Large monitoring database,
  • Mapping,
  • Monitoring programs,
  • U.S. Gulf of Mexico
Abstract

Since the onset of fisheries science, monitoring programs have been implemented to support stock assessments and fisheries management. Here, we take inventory of the monitoring programs of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico (GOM) surveying fish and invertebrates and conduct a gap analysis of these programs. We also compile a large monitoring database encompassing much of the monitoring data collected in the U.S. GOM using random sampling schemes and employ this database to fit statistical models to then map the spatial distributions of 61 fish and invertebrate functional groups, species and life stages of the U.S. GOM. Finally, we provide recommendations for improving current monitoring programs and designing new programs, and guidance for more comprehensive use and sharing of monitoring data, with the ultimate goal of enhancing the inputs provided to stock assessments and ecosystem-based fisheries management (EBFM) projects in the U.S. GOM. Our inventory revealed that 73 fisheries-independent and fisheries-dependent programs have been conducted in the U.S. GOM, most of which (85%) are still active. One distinctive feature of monitoring programs of the U.S. GOM is that they include many fisheries-independent surveys conducted almost year-round, contrasting with most other marine regions. A major sampling recommendation is the development of a coordinated strategy for collecting diet information by existing U.S. GOM monitoring programs for advancing EBFM.

DOI
10.1007/s11160-018-9525-2
Comments

The online version of this article ( https://doi.org/10.1007/s11160-018-9525-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Additional Comments
This work was funded in part by the Florida RESTORE Act Centers of Excellence Research Grants Program, Subagreement No. 2015-01-UM-522. © Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature 2018
Citation Information
Arnaud Gruss, Holly A. Perryman, Elizabeth A. Babcock, Skyler Sagarese, et al.. "Monitoring Programs of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico: Inventory, Development and Use of a Large Monitoring Database to Map Fish and Invertebrate Spatial Distributions" Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries (2018) ISSN: 0960-3166
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tracey-sutton/209/