catchability
Catchability is a parameter used in fisheries science to describe how easily individuals from a population can be captured by a particular fishing method or gear, under a given level of fishing effort. In its common form, catchability is represented by the coefficient q in the equation C = q E N, where C is catch (numbers or biomass), E is fishing effort, and N is population abundance. When q is constant, CPUE (catch per unit effort) is proportional to N, making CPUE a proxy for abundance.
Catchability is not fixed; it varies across time, space, gear types, and target species. Factors influencing
Estimation and application: catchability is typically estimated within stock assessment models, either as a constant parameter
Limitations: assuming constant catchability can bias results; heterogeneity among individuals, spatial structure, gear selectivity, and imperfect