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MEPS prepress abstract   -  DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps14843

Using community science to assess the population dynamics and spatial ecology of the critically endangered giant sea bass, Stereolepis gigas, in Southern California

Andrew T. Pettit*, Miranda Haggerty, Molly R. Morse, Ryan Freedman, Francis Joyce, Conner Jainese, Kaitlin Seeto, Jennifer E. Caselle, Douglas J. McCauley

*Corresponding author:

ABSTRACT: The giant sea bass, Stereolepis gigas, is the largest marine teleost found along the California, USA coast and is an important apex predator in kelp forests and rocky reef ecosystems. Due to their slow-growing nature and tendency to form predictable, seasonal aggregations, S. gigas were heavily overfished across much of their range: Humboldt Bay, California, to Oaxaca, Southern Mexico, and in the Gulf of California. Now listed as Critically Endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and partially protected by a fishing moratorium in California, there is some evidence that the California S. gigas population has begun to recover. However, there has never been a direct population assessment of their numbers in California. Using more than 1,600 community-sourced photos of S. gigas via the Spotting Giant Sea Bass Project, we identified unique individuals through their spot patterns using pattern-matching algorithms, as S. gigas have idiosyncratic markings on their flanks. Estimates from a POPAN mark-recapture model suggest an approximate total population of 1,221 adult individuals in Southern California from 2015 to 2022. Additionally, a Pradel mark-recapture model indicates an increasing population trend, corroborated by an increase in incidental catch of S. gigas documented in set gill net incidental landing receipts. We also found evidence of minimal population connectivity throughout Southern California with high site fidelity amongst resighted individuals. The contribution of this open and living resource of photo-identification data further creates the capacity to answer critical questions regarding the life history, behavior, and population structure of S. gigas, to inform future recovery efforts for this at-risk species.