Rockfish, particularly yelloweye (Sebastes ruberrimus) and quillback (Sebastes maliger), are vulnerable to overfishing because they mature late and have affinity for shallow water (50–200 m) habitats. Because studies relating habitat… Click to show full abstract
Rockfish, particularly yelloweye (Sebastes ruberrimus) and quillback (Sebastes maliger), are vulnerable to overfishing because they mature late and have affinity for shallow water (50–200 m) habitats. Because studies relating habitat characteristics with the distribution and presence of rockfishes at large scales (100s of kilometres) remain scarce, we sought to investigate the relationships between benthic characteristics with the presence–absence and abundance of rockfishes caught in longline surveys in nearshore waters of southern British Columbia. Habitat parameters were calculated from a 20 m resolution bathymetry layer. Yelloweye and quillback were examined separately and combined with 19 other rockfish species in a species aggregate (total rockfish); occurrence data were fitted with generalized linear mixed effects models, and abundance data were fitted with zero-inflated mixed effects models. The relationship between rockfish abundance with presence–absence and slope, distance to rocky habitat, and fine bathymetric position index suggests that these species prefer rocky, steep habitat. While underwater visual observation data offer measures of visual fish habitat and abundance, longline surveys may be a more cost-effective method for large-scale studies.
               
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