Prosomal-width-to-weight relationships in American horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus): examining conversion factors used to estimate landings

Files

TR Number

Date

2009-04

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

National Marine Fisheries Service Scientific Publication Office

Abstract

Horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus) are valued by many stakeholders, including the commercial fishing industry, biomedical companies, and environmental interest groups. We designed a study to test the accuracy of the conversion factors that were used by NOAA Fisheries and state agencies to estimate horseshoe crab landings before mandatory reporting that began in 1998. Our results indicate that the NOAA Fisheries conversion factor consistently overestimates the weight of male horseshoe crabs, particularly those from New England populations. Because of the inaccuracy of this and other conversion factors, states are now mandated to report the number (not biomass) and sex of landed horseshoe crabs. However, accurate estimates of biomass are still necessary for use in prediction models that are being developed to better manage the horseshoe crab fishery. We recommend that managers use the conversion factors presented in this study to convert current landing data from numbers to biomass of harvested horseshoe crabs for future assessments.

Description

Keywords

delaware bay, cape-cod, movement patterns, massachusetts, eggs, populations, mortality, blood, usa, fisheries

Citation

Graham, Larissa J. and Botton, Mark L. and Hata, David and Loveland, Robert E. and Murphy, Brian R. (2009). "Prosomal-width-to-weight relationships in American horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus): examining conversion factors used to estimate landings," Fishery Bulletin, 107(2), pp. 235-243. http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1072/graham.pdf