Abstract
Development of multispecies virtual population analysis (MSVPA), which assesses interspecific and intraspecific predation through an analysis of stomach contents, has verified the hypothesis that predation among exploited fish species contributes significantly to their natural mortality and that predation, and thus natural mortality, is inherently variable from year to year. In single-species virtual population analysis (SSVPA), natural mortality is assumed to be constant. MSVPA also suggests that natural mortality among young fish after recruitment is much higher than previously thought. Although catch quotas based on predictions of short-term catches from multispecies assessments would appear to differ little from those derived from single-species assessments, and certain problems remain to be resolved before multispecies assessments can be accepted for fish stock management, the method has considerable implications for management. For instance, it suggests that effects of mesh sizes and bycatch on fisheries need reevaluation and that year class strength may not be as fixed as previously assumed.

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