Abstract
Determining the population age structure of important fish species with high accuracy and precision is fundamental to age-based fish stock assessment. Otoliths sampled for independent age reading by Russian and Norwegian specialists have routinely been exchanged twice annually since 1992. In total, 6386 pairs of otoliths were exchanged during 1992–2006; to verify techniques, 1331 of these were read repeatedly by experts attending annual joint age readers’ meetings. Important lessons have been learned during these 15 years of collaborative, regular, and systematic age reading. Consistency between the two laboratories in reading cod ages appears to have increased. The scientific, biological, and hence economic effect, of this work is easily observed. The need for regular meetings to tune and coordinate age-reading procedures is ongoing.
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Published in collaboration with the University of Bergen and the Institute of Marine Research, Norway, and the Marine Biological Laboratory, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Published in collaboration with the University of Bergen and the Institute of Marine Research, Norway, and the Marine Biological Laboratory, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Acknowledgements
The authors thank all those who helped in the preparation of the manuscript at different stages, the two anonymous referees who provided with important comments to the paper, as well as the editors who made the paper more intelligible.
Notes
Published in collaboration with the University of Bergen and the Institute of Marine Research, Norway, and the Marine Biological Laboratory, University of Copenhagen, Denmark