. "[525BC9969C98]" . . "000292337600004" . "RIV/60077344:_____/11:00367139" . "US - Spojen\u00E9 st\u00E1ty americk\u00E9" . . . . . "10"^^ . . . "RIV/60077344:_____/11:00367139!RIV12-MSM-60077344" . "Fisheries Management and Ecology" . . "4"^^ . "Kube\u010Dka, Jan" . . . "Jankovsk\u00FD, Martin" . . . . . . "I, P(7F10070), Z(AV0Z50070508), Z(AV0Z60170517)" . "3"^^ . . "18" . "angler preferences; catch statistics; reservoirs; catch per unit effort; time series correlations"@en . "Tracing possible drivers of synchronously fluctuating species catches in individual logbook data"@en . . . . . "Boukal s., David" . "10.1111/j.1365-2400.2011.00783.x" . "Tracing possible drivers of synchronously fluctuating species catches in individual logbook data"@en . "0969-997X" . . "Tracing possible drivers of synchronously fluctuating species catches in individual logbook data" . "Pivni\u010Dka, K." . "For some reservoirs in the Czech Republic, there are conspicuous synchronous fluctuations in catches of different species that might be caused by fishing skills and strategies. This study describes a method that could detect signatures of such phenomena in individual logbooks. It classifies anglers by species reported during1 year and compares the resulting angler groups by group size, fishing effort, catch per unit effort (CPUE) and annual catch. The method is illustrated by data from one reservoir, showing that the number of generalist anglers who caught several species was higher than expected. Generalists also had higher catches and effort but lower CPUE than specialists who caught only one of the species. The results indicate that generalist anglers with a low degree of specialisation and high effort could contribute to long-term correlations in species catches."@en . . "235680" . "4" . "Tracing possible drivers of synchronously fluctuating species catches in individual logbook data" . "For some reservoirs in the Czech Republic, there are conspicuous synchronous fluctuations in catches of different species that might be caused by fishing skills and strategies. This study describes a method that could detect signatures of such phenomena in individual logbooks. It classifies anglers by species reported during1 year and compares the resulting angler groups by group size, fishing effort, catch per unit effort (CPUE) and annual catch. The method is illustrated by data from one reservoir, showing that the number of generalist anglers who caught several species was higher than expected. Generalists also had higher catches and effort but lower CPUE than specialists who caught only one of the species. The results indicate that generalist anglers with a low degree of specialisation and high effort could contribute to long-term correlations in species catches." . .