Science Advisory Report 2024/005
*This advice was developed in a peer review meeting in 2023 and should be interpreted within the context of the situation at that time.
American Lobster (Homarus americanus) Stock Assessment on the North Shore (LFAs 15, 16, 17 And 18), Quebec, in 2022
Summary
- Lobster landings on the North Shore increased sharply to 1,468 t in 2022, up 36.3% from 2018. In LFA 15, landings totalled 204 t in 2022, up 194.2% from 2018 and up 408.6% from the average of the past 25 years (1997–2021). In LFA 16, landings totalled 194 t in 2022, up 121% from 2018 and up 473% from the average of the past 25 years. In LFA 18, landings totalled 167 t in 2022, up 30.5% from 2018 and up 386.3% from the average of the past 25 years. The 2022 values are among the highest in the historical series. In LFA 17B, landings totalled 902 t in 2022, following an all-time high in 2021 (1,120 t). The 2022 landings were up 14.0% from 2018 and up 158.1% from the average of the past 25 years.
- The catch per unit effort (CPUE) by weight from logbooks has increased by 79% in LFA 15 and 16 since 2018, reaching 1.11 kg/trap in 2022. This value is 246% higher than the 1993–2021 average. In LFA 18D, the 2022 CPUE (6.04 kg/trap) was up 43.8% from 2018 and up 88.8% from the 2012–2021 average. In LFA 17B, the 2022 CPUE (4.1 kg/trap) was up 19.2% from 2018 and up 86.4% from the 2006–2021 average. Overall, fishing effort has been increasing since 2011 in the North Shore and Anticosti Island fishing areas.
- Very little sampling is done on the North Shore and Anticosti Island for the assessment of demographic indicators, particularly for LFAs 15 and 16 where data are missing for 2020, 2021 and 2022. Given the significant rise in fishing effort in these areas, scientific sampling effort should be increased. Size structures in LFA 17B are wide ranging, and the average size is stable for commercial-sized lobsters.
- Temperature indicators were examined in keeping with the ecosystem approach, but further work is required to incorporate them into the assessment of resource status. Small rock crab is a key prey source for lobster. However, over the past two years, no data has been available for the North Shore and Anticosti Island.
- Abundance indicators (landings and CPUE) have risen sharply on the North Shore and Anticosti Island. Lobster populations in these areas appear to be in good condition. Nevertheless, these populations may be vulnerable to overexploitation, given that the legal size is smaller than their size at sexual maturity, and they are slow-growing.
- It is not possible to provide comments from an ecosystem perspective because of the lack of data and/or their interpretation.
This Science Advisory Report is from the February 28-March 3, 2023 regional peer review on the Assessment of the lobster in Quebec’s inshore waters in 2022 and advice for the 2023 to 2025 fishing seasons. Additional publications from this meeting will be posted on the Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) Science Advisory Schedule as they become available.
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