7,837 research outputs found

    Infertility problems and mental health symptoms in a community-based sample: depressive symptoms among infertile men, but not women

    Get PDF
    Most researchers agree that men’s and women’s experiences of infertility are fundamentally different, and impacts upon the nature of psychological distress encountered. However, design flaws, including non-random samples unrepresentative of the general population, compromise many existing studies. Data derived from a random general community sample provides prevalence of current infertility, and permits examination of longitudinal associations between mental health symptoms and infertility among 1,978 participants aged 28-32 years. In the previous 12-months, infertility was experienced by 2.1% and 5.4% partnered men and women. Infertility independently predicted depressive symptomatology in men, and anxiety symptoms among women. Gender differences were sustained, even controlling for prior depression and anxiety. Health professionals are encouraged to proactively enquire about affective symptoms experienced by both women and men with infertility problems

    Initial population model fits to the humpback breeding stocks D, E1 and Oceania

    Get PDF
    This document provides initial results of population model fits to the Southern Hemisphere humpback whale breeding stocks D (West Australia), E1 (East Australia) and Oceania. The purpose of this document is to put preliminary results on the table to facilitate further discussion and model runs at IWC 64. The initial results indicate that breeding stock D is near to its pristine abundance, stock E1 is at an intermediate level, and Oceania is still heavily depleted. There are inconsistencies between the model and the various relative abundance indices for stock D, which need further discussion

    Sustainable management initiatives for the Southern African hake fisheries over recent years

    Get PDF
    The predominantly trawl fishery for hake contributes about half the landed value of all of South Africa's commercial fisheries, and is approaching the largest contributor to Namibia's gross domestic product (GDP). Two hake species are taken by these fisheries: shallow-water hake Merluccius capensis Castelnau, 1861 and deep-water hake Merluccius paradoxus Franca, 1960. The present management framework separates the resources into three areas: Namibia and the South African West and South Coasts. Some 30 yrs ago, particularly as a result of rapidly increasing foreign fishing effort over the preceding decade, all of these hake stocks had been severely depleted. We address the question of how successfully sustainable utilization and resource recovery has been achieved since that time. Although there has indeed been some recovery —to a greater extent for the stocks off South Africa—the historical record indicates over-optimistic appraisals of likely recovery rates and sustainable yield levels over this period, and some of the reasons for this are discussed. Certain key assessment questions remain: why is recruitment variability estimated to be so low, natural mortality so high, and why do estimates of stock-recruitment steepness, survey selectivity-at-age and bias in swept-area survey estimates differ so greatly between the stocks? For the most part, total allowable catch (TAC) for these fisheries over the past decade have been set using Operational Management Procedures (OMPs), pre-set rules applied to pre-specified resource monitoring data, where the selection of the procedure to be used is based upon simulation testing to ensure adequate robustness to uncertainties in data and model-structure, in the spirit of a precautionary approach. We discuss the ability in practice of this approach to achieve the necessary adaptive framework for management and summarize planned future initiatives towards refining this OMP approach. These include changing from the present species-aggregated to separate procedures for M. capensis and M. paradoxus. This is necessitated particularly by an increasing longline component in the South African hake fishery, which focuses on M. capensis and takes mainly 6+ aged fish, compared to the mainly 3+ by the trawlers

    Building a bridge between the May and the September Reference Cases for the South African resource and related matters

    Get PDF
    An investigation of the reasons for the changes in particularly M. paradoxus assessment results from the May to the September Reference Case (RC) assessments shows these to be almost entirely a consequence of the changed formulations for selectivities, with updating of and further years’ data having little impact. The probability of a TAC drop of greater than 5% under the current OMP is not high, and in terms of the September RC is not forecast to occur with more than 5% probability before the end of the decade

    A note on the sensitivity of hake assessments to the choice of the central year for the shift from a primarily M. Capensis to primarily M. Paradoxus fishery

    Get PDF
    At the February 18 meeting of the DWG, there was a request from Industry for further assessment runs for different choices for the central year for the switch from a primarily M. capensis to a primarily M. paradoxus deep-sea trawl fishery. This note reports the results from such assessment runs for a set of choices for this central year ranging from 1940 to 1972. Fig. 1 shows time trends of the proportion of M. capensis in the catch for these alternatives. These results are repeated for three different choices for the natural mortality vector assumed: both the high and low options put forward for the Reference Set (RS) in Rademeyer and Butterworth (2010), and also for the intermediate vector chosen for the Reference Case (RC = RS1). All runs show results for a modified Ricker choice for the stock-recruitment relationship, as for the RC

    Report on progress with refined hake assessment

    Get PDF
    Work is in progress on developing refined Operating Models for the hake resource to form the basis for the simulation testing of the next OMP due for adoption late in 2010. The primary form of model used is likely to be an extension of the area-specific selectivity-based approach used in 2006 (i.e. using changes in selectivity by area rather than explicit movement models to reflect changes in hake distribution with age). Two key new features, as recommended by the International Stock Assessment Workshop held in December 2008, are accounting for gender differences (because male and female hake grow at different rates, confounding the interpretation of length distribution data if this is not taken into account), and fitting directly to age-length data rather than to derived age distributions to account properly for biases that otherwise enter evaluations. We attach a DRAFT on the associated assessment paper currently under development. Note that this is NOT final, either in terms of editing or (preliminary) results shown, but is provided now to FACILITATE FEEDBACK. The primary task of the international stock assessment workshop taking place over November 30 to December 4 will be to review progress with the development of Operating Models and make recommendations for their finalisation early in the new year. Towards this end, work must now be sharply focussed to ensure that results of analyses to be tabled at the start of that workshop are as informative as possible. Accordingly feedback is requested from DWG members and observers (and will also be requested of the three-person international panel) on the following

    A spatially structured stock assessment for the South African hake resource with movement based on a gravity model, and including fitting to outputs from the GeoPop Model

    Get PDF
    The gravity model of explicit spatial movement for the two South African hake species is extended to take account of advice from a mini-task group as on the plausibility of some earlier estimates of movement proportions and to incorporate information from the a GeoPop model to hake survey information over the 1998-2012 period. Addition of the GeoPop data leads to increasing M. capensis but decreasing M. paradoxus estimates of abundance over recent years. There is little impact on nearly all estimates of movement parameters

    An illustrative example of a management procedure for Eastern North Atlantic Bluefin tuna

    Get PDF
    This document provides an illustrative example of the development of Candidate Management Procedures (MPs) for the Eastern North Atlantic bluefin tuna resource. Its purpose is to draw attention to key components of this process, including the specification of a number of alternative Operating Models (OMs) which describe plausible dynamics for the resource, the choices of abundance indices for use for input to MPs and of the error structures associated with the generation of future data corresponding to those indices, and consideration of key performance statistics related to future catch levels and resource conservation to allow consideration of the different trade-offs between these for alternative MPs. The MPs examined use a combination of target and slope based approaches applied to simulated future abundance indices from Japanese longline operations and a larval survey in an area of the western Mediterranean. MP trials are carried out for four OMs which reflect alternative resource assessments and choices for relationships between recruitment and spawning biomass. The greatest challenge appears to come from a scenario with both high and low recruitment regimes when there is a change from the former to the latter. If catches are allowed to go high to benefit from the period of high recruitment, can the change in regime be identified sufficiently soon to allow for adequate catch limit reductions to ensure resource conservation during the later years of lower recruitments

    Yet further CMP projections for the South African hake resource

    Get PDF
    This document addresses issues raised at and outstanding from the previous discussions of the hake OMP revision at the DWG meeting on 26 August, and concludes by listing issues still requiring choices/analyses to be able to finalise this OMP revision process at the next DWG meeting on 13 October
    • …
    corecore