6 results
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2016-020
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Spatial management within the NSW Ocean Trawl Fishery

The NSW Department of Primary Industries-Fisheries has outlined the results of a four-year trawl survey (2017-2020) aimed at evaluating spatial management provisions within the NSW Ocean Trawl Fishery (OTF) and the potential for these to be adapted to deal with tactical challenges associated with...
ORGANISATION:
NSW Department of Primary Industries
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2015-011
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Understanding the factors contributing to decreased school prawn productivity in Camden Haven Estuary and associated lakes, to target ameliorative actions

New South Wales Department of Primary Industries (NSW DPI) presents new information exploring the effect of catchment-derived stressors on Eastern School Prawn. Declines in School Prawn productivity over decadal time scales have been reported anecdotally across many estuaries in New South Wales, and...
ORGANISATION:
NSW Department of Primary Industries

Reducing the discarding of small prawns in NSW's commercial and recreational prawn fisheries

Project number: 2001-031
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $494,430.00
Principal Investigator: Matt K. Broadhurst
Organisation: NSW Department of Primary Industries
Project start/end date: 24 Jul 2001 - 30 Jun 2005
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Prawn resources underpin some of the most economically important fisheries in Australia and form the basis of very important recreational fisheries. Ecologically sustainable development of fisheries resources partly depends on catching species at optimal sizes and there is considerable concern that the gears being used in NSW’s commercial and recreational prawn fisheries catch them at sizes smaller than that which optimises biological yield.

Prawn fisheries in NSW (and the world) have attracted enormous attention in the past few decades over their by-catch of non-targeted species – especially juvenile fish. In NSW, this led to the development, implementation and legislation of various gear-based solutions like the Nordmore Grid and square mesh panels (see attached publication list). A major by-catch issue remaining for NSW’s prawn fisheries concerns the by-catch and discard of unsaleable sizes of school and king prawns. Currently, large numbers of small prawns are discarded well after capture (sometimes even after cooking) through the process of “riddling” which involves passing the prawn catch over a sieve to separate large and small individuals. This is considered a major waste of a resource – especially since it is known that, for fast-growing prawns, undersize individuals could be expected to reach a desirable size in a relatively short time. Unfortunately, virtually no research has been done on the selectivity of school and king prawns in any of the gears used to catch them (i.e. prawn trawls, haul nets, set pocket nets and snigging nets in commercial fisheries; and dragnets and scoop nets in recreational fisheries). All are thought to catch large numbers of very small school and king prawns that are discarded well after capture. If excluded from nets underwater, these prawns should, in a relatively short period of time, provide substantially improved catches of the more desirable and valuable sizes of prawns.

In 1998, Broadhurst, Larsen, Kennelly and McShane developed a codend made entirely of small square mesh to reduce the discards of small western king prawns in Gulf St Vincent, South Australia. The current application is for funds to develop full square-meshed codends and other methods to decrease the discard of small prawns throughout the many commercial and recreational prawn fisheries of NSW.

Objectives

1. To develop and test a variety of modifications to gears and fishing practices that will improve size selectivity and reduce the by-catch and discarding of small school and king prawns from the many methods used to catch them in NSW’s commercial and recreational fisheries.
2. To facilitate the extension of the research results throughout the appropriate sectors.
3. To recommend and help implement appropriate changes to regulations governing these methods to ensure the widespread use of the results.

Studies of the growth and mortality of school prawns

Project number: 2001-029
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $562,041.47
Principal Investigator: Steven Montgomery
Organisation: NSW Department of Primary Industries
Project start/end date: 29 Jun 2002 - 13 May 2009
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Considering the prominence of the NSW prawn resources, it is important that managers be equipped with the information necessary to manage the school prawn resource in a sustainable way that provides equity for all stakeholders. Despite its prominence as one of the two most important contributors to the prawn production in NSW, little is known about the population dynamics of this species.

There is evidence to suggest that the school prawn populations in NSW may be overfished. Available information shows that the size of spawning populations in ocean waters may be declining and that prawns are being caught at sizes far shorter than those that would optimise biological “yield per recruit” under an F0.1 fishing policy.

The data which was used in this population modeling of the species had relatively low levels of precision. Estimates of growth and mortality with acceptable levels of precision are needed so that population models can be used with confidence to predict the outcomes of scenarios aimed at optimising the use of the school prawn resource. Out of a list of ten topics needing research, attendees at the Juvenile Prawn Summit assigned the highest priority for research to the study of growth and mortality of school prawns.

Objectives

1. To estimate values for parameters describing growth of school prawns.
2. To estimate values for instantaneous fishing mortality for school prawns.

Final report

Authors: S.S. Montgomery C.T. Walsh C.L. Kesby and D.D. Johnson
Final Report • 2011-05-10 • 4.89 MB
2001-029-DLD.pdf

Summary

Information about growth and mortality are important in the management of resources because these provide us with an understanding about the productivity of the target population. Estimates are used to assess the impact of fishing upon the target population and the effectiveness of various scenarios in achieving the management objective which is usually the sustainable harvest of resources. The school prawn, Metapenaeus macleayi, is one of three target penaeid species of commercial and recreational importance in estuaries of NSW. It contributes around 64% by weight and 46% by value to prawn production in NSW and is harvested by three commercial fisheries; namely the ocean trawl (8% by weight of commercial landings), estuary prawn trawl (64 %) and the estuary general fishery (28%). Because all stocks could not be studied, we adopted the approach of choosing those that were expected to include the greatest variability about growth and mortality parameter estimates. Growth was investigated by doing monthly fishery independent surveys on the Clarence and Hunter Rivers. Monthly length frequencies were separated into groups of prawns of similar age and these data were then fitted to the Schnute growth models. Female prawn growth was best fitted by a special case of the Schnute model which is equivalent to the von Bertalanffy growth function (VBGF; L∞ = 36.6 and 40.2 CL mm and κ = 0.005 and 0.005 day -1, for Clarence and Hunter, respectively), whilst male growth was best fitted by a four parameter Schnute curve (L∞ = 21.3 and 33.5 CL mm and κ = 0.025 and 0.009 day-1, for Clarence and Hunter, respectively). Male school prawns grew to smaller maximum lengths and had faster rates of growth than females and lived for less than two years. While female growth data fitted the VBGF, much of the observed growth was linear and female prawns never reached the maximum lengths predicted by the growth model, probably because of high rates of mortality. Male growth differed between stocks but female growth did not.

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