Terms of Reference
Pre-COSEWIC Assessment for Canary Rockfish
Pacific Region Peer Review Meeting
November 7-8, 2017
Nanaimo, BC
Chairperson: Maria Cornthwaite
Context
The implementation of the federal Species at Risk Act (SARA), proclaimed in June 2003, begins with an assessment of a species’ risk of extinction by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC). COSEWIC is a non-government scientific advisory body that has been established under Section 14(1) of SARA to perform species assessments, which provide the scientific foundation for listing species under SARA. Therefore, an assessment initiates the regulatory process whereby the competent Minister must decide whether to accept COSEWIC’s assessment and add a species to Schedule 1 of SARA, which would result in legal protection for the species under the Act. If the species is already on Schedule 1 of SARA, the Minister may decide to keep the species on the list, reclassify it as per the COSEWIC assessment, or to remove it from the list (Section 27 of SARA).
Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO), as a generator and archivist of information on marine species and some freshwater species, is to provide COSEWIC with the best information available to ensure that an accurate assessment of the status of a species can be undertaken.
The Canary Rockfish (Sebastes pinniger) was listed on COSEWIC’s 2015 Call for Bids to produce a status report, with the following justification:
Canary Rockfish was originally assessed as Threatened in 2007 (COSEWIC 2007) largely because two surveys in the southern part of its Canadian range were considered the most reliable indicators of population trend, and showed abundance index declines of 78% and 96% over 30 years and 17 years respectively. Survey indices from the northern part of the range and commercial catch per unit effort indices showed no consistent trends but were of relatively short duration and are in some cases based on methods which do not adequately sample areas inhabited by the species. There was uncertainty due to high variability in the various index series (characteristic of trawl surveys) and the unknown degree to which abundance trends in the southern part of the Canadian range reflect abundance trends throughout the species’ range in Canadian waters (Stanley et al. 2005).
Fishing is the most likely cause of the observed decline.
Canary rockfish are found from the western Gulf of Alaska (Shelikof Strait) to northern Baja California. Populations are most abundant between B.C. and northern California. They are broadly distributed in continental shelf and coastal waters of B.C.
Objective
The overall objective of this meeting is to peer-review existing DFO information relevant to the COSEWIC status assessment for Canary Rockfishin Canadian waters, considering data related to the status and trends of, and threats to this species inside and outside of Canadian waters, and the strengths and limitations of the information. This information will be available to COSEWIC, the authors of the species status report, and the co-chairs of the applicable COSEWIC Species Specialist Subcommittee. Publications from the peer-review meeting (see below) will be posted on the CSAS website.
Specifically, DFO information relevant to the following will be reviewed to the extent possible:
- Life history characteristics
- Growth parameters: age and/or length at maturity, maximum age and/or length
- Total and natural mortality rates and recruitment rates (if data are available)
- Fecundity
- Generation time
- Early life history patterns
- Specialised niche or habitat requirements
- Review of designatable units
- Review the COSEWIC criteriafor the species in Canada as a whole, and for each designatable units identified, if any. See Wildlife Species Assessment: COSEWIC Assessment Process, Categories and Guidelines.
- Summarize overall trends in population size (both number of mature individuals and total numbers in the population) over as long a period as possible and in particular for the past three generations (taken as mean age of parents). Additionally, present data on a scale appropriate to the data to clarify the rate of decline.
- Identify threats to abundance— where declines have occurred over the past three generations, summarize the degree to which the causes of the declines are understood, and the evidence that the declines are a result of natural variability, habitat loss, fishing, or other human activity.
- Where declines have occurred over the past three generations, summarize the evidence that the declines have ceased, are reversible, and the likely time scales for reversibility.
- Summarise the current extent of occurrence (in km2) in Canadian waters.
- Summarise the current area of occupancy (in km2) in Canadian waters
- Summarise changes in extent of occurrence and area of occupancy over as long a time as possible, and in particular, over the past three generations.
- Summarise any evidence that there have been changes in the degree of fragmentation of the overall population, or a reduction in the number of meta-population units.
- Summarise the proportion of the population that resides in Canadian waters, migration patterns (if any), and known breeding areas.
- Tabulate the best scientific estimates of the number of mature individuals;
- If there are likely to be fewer than 10,000 mature individuals, summarize trends in numbers of mature individuals over the past 10 years or three generations, and, to the extent possible, causes for the trends.
- Describe the characteristics or elements of the species habitat to the extent possible, and threats to that habitat
- Describe the functional properties that a species’ aquatic habitat must have to allow successful completion of all life history stages:
In the best cases, the functional properties will include both features of the habitat occupied by the species and the mechanisms by which those habitat features play a role in the survivorship or fecundity of the species. However, in many cases the functional properties cannot be described beyond reporting patterns of distribution observed (or expected) in data sources, and general types of habitat feature known to be present in the area(s) of occurrence and suspected to have functional properties. Information will rarely be equally available for all life history stages of an aquatic species, and even distributional information may be missing for some stages. Science advice needs to be carefully worded in this regard to clearly communicate uncertainties and knowledge gaps. - Provide information on the spatial extent of the areas that are likely to have functional properties:
Where geo-referenced data on habitat features are readily available, these data could be used to map and roughly quantify the locations and extent of the species’ habitat. Generally however, it should be sufficient to provide narrative information on what is known of the extent of occurrence of the types of habitats identified. Many information sources, including Aboriginal Traditional Knowledge (ATK) and experiential knowledge, may contribute to these efforts. - Identify the activities most likely to threaten the functional properties, and provide information on the extent and consequences of those activities:
COSEWIC’s operational guidelines require consideration of both the imminence of each identified threat, and the strength of evidence that the threat actually does cause harm to the species or its habitat. The information and advice from the Pre-COSEWIC review should provide whatever information is available on both of those points. In addition, the information and advice should include at least a narrative discussion of the magnitude of impact caused by each identified threat when it does occur. - Recommend research or analysis activities that are necessary:
Usually the work on the other Guidelines will identify many knowledge gaps.
Recommendations made and enacted at this stage in the overall process could result in much more information being available should a Recovery Potential Assessment be required for the species. - Describe to the extent possible whether the species has a residence as defined by SARA
- Threats
- Threats need to pose serious or irreversible damage to the species. It is important to determine the magnitude (severity), extent (spatial), frequency (temporal) and causal certainty of each threat.
- Naturally limiting factors, such as aging, disease and/or predation that limit the distribution and/or abundance of a species are not normally considered threats unless they are altered by human activity or may pose a threat to a critically small or isolated population.
- Distinction should be made between general threats (e.g. agriculture) and specific threats (e.g. siltation from tile drains), which are caused by general activities.
- The causal certainty of each threat must be assessed and explicitly stated as threats identified may be based on hypothesis testing (lab or field), observation, expert opinion or speculation.
- Manipulated Populations
- Other
Available information on population differentiation, which could support a COSEWIC decision of which populations below the species’ level would be suitable for assessment and designation, will be reviewed. Information on morphology, meristics, genetics and distribution will be considered and discussed.
See COSEWIC Guidelines for recognizing Designatable Units.
COSEWIC Criterion – Declining Total Population
COSEWIC Criterion – Small Distribution and Decline or Fluctuation: for the species in Canada as a whole, and for designatable units identified, using information in the most recent assessments:
COSEWIC Criterion - Small Total Population Size and Decline and Very Small and Restricted: for the species in Canada as a whole, and for designatable units identified, using information in the most recent assessments:
Summarise the options for combining indicators to provide an assessment of status, and the caveats and uncertainties associated with each option.
For transboundary stocks, summarise the status of the population(s) outside of Canadian waters. State whether rescue from outside populations is likely.
Habitat is defined as “in respect of aquatic species, spawning grounds and nursery, rearing, food supply, migration and any other areas on which aquatic species depend directly or indirectly in order to carry out their life processes, or areas where aquatic species formerly occurred and have the potential to be reintroduced”.
The phrasing of the following guidelines would be adapted to each specific species and some could be dropped on a case-by-case basis if considered biologically irrelevant. However, these questions should be posed even in cases when relatively little information is expected to be available, to ensure that every effort is made to consolidate whatever knowledge and information does exist on an aquatic species’ habitat requirements, and made available to COSEWIC.
SARA s. 2(1) defines Residence as “a dwelling-place, such as a den, nest or other similar area or place, that is occupied or habitually occupied by one or more individuals during all or part of their life cycles, including breeding, rearing, staging, wintering, feeding or hibernating.”
A threat is any activity or process (both natural and anthropogenic) that has caused, is causing, or may cause harm, death, or behavioural changes to a species at risk or the destruction, degradation, and/or impairment of its habitat to the extent that population-level effects occur. See Threats and Limiting Factors section in Instructions for the Preparation of COSEWIC Status Reports.
List and describe threats to the species considering:
An increasing number of wildlife species have seen their distribution or genetic make-up manipulated by humans, deliberately or accidentally. COSEWIC has developed guidelines to help determine the eligibility of populations for inclusion in wildlife species status assessments. Information available to DFO should be provided to facilitate such determination. See COSEWIC Guidelines on Manipulated Populations.
Finally, as time allows, review status and trends in other indicators that would be relevant to evaluating the risk of extinction of the species. This includes the likelihood of imminent or continuing decline in the abundance or distribution of the species, or that would otherwise be of value in preparation of COSEWIC Status Reports.
Working Paper
Keppel, E. 2017. A Review of Canary Rockfish (Sebastes pinniger) along the Pacific coast of Canada: biology, distribution and abundance trends. CSAP Working Paper 2015SAR13.
Expected Publications
- Proceedings
- Research Document
Expected Participation
- DFO: Science, Resource Management and SARA program
- COSEWIC sub-committee chairs
- Industry
- Province of BC
References
COSEWIC. 2007. COSEWIC assessment and status report on the canary rockfish Sebastes pinniger in Canada. Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. Ottawa. vii + 71 pp.
Stanley, R.D., Starr, P., Olsen, N., Rutherford, K., and Wallace, S.S. 2005. Status Report on Canary rockfish Sebastes pinniger. DFO Can. Sci. Advis. Sec. Res. Doc. 2005/089. vi + 105 p.
Notice
Participation to CSAS peer review meetings is by invitation only.
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