Effort Dynamics of the Northern California Dungeness Crab (Cancer magister) Fishery

Abstract
Knowledge of the dynamic response of fishing effort to abundance is essential to a complete understanding of the cycles in catch in the northern California Dungeness crab fishery. In this fishery there is a lagged response of harvest rate to changes in abundance that is caused either by a time lag in fishermen entering and leaving the fishery following changes in abundance, a lag in market expansion and contraction following changes in abundance, or a combination of both. The time lag in this response appears to have decreased over the past 30 yr. This lagged response is a potential cause of the cycles. However, neither of the two potential cyclic mechanisms examined here, a predator–prey mechanism (with man as the predator) and a price-dependent escapement mechanism (with price dependent on past catch), is a cause of these cycles. Although time-varying effort does not cause the cycles, it does have a substantial effect on the resulting catch record and population dynamics. If there is a density-dependent recruitment mechanism in this population as proposed earlier, the presence of this lagged response would cause the period of observed cycles to be longer than would be expected on the basis of population dynamics alone. Hence, previous estimates of the expected period of cycles from various population mechanisms are low. Removal of this response is a potential means of stabilizing this fishery.Key words: effort, Dungeness crab, harvest rate, predator–prey, price, stability, age, cycles

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