258 results
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1998-213
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Sustainable development of Tropical Australia: R&D for management of land, water and marine resources

In May 1998, CSIRO Marine Research and Tropical Agriculture were commissioned by the Fisheries Research and Development Corporation (FRDC) and the Land and Water Resources Research and Development Corporation (LWRRDC) to undertake a six-month scoping study to examine opportunities for the...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1998-209
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Detection and abundance of Paramoeba species in the environment

Amoebic gill disease (AGD) remains the major disease associated with sea-cage culture of Atlantic salmon in Tasmania. AGD is associated with a Paramoeba species infecting the gills. Current treatment involves multiple freshwater bathes for all fish. This treatment has a significant financial impact...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1998-168
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Sustainability indicators/ESD review

Ecologically sustainable development (ESD) has been accepted as the foundation for the management of natural resources in Australia since 1992, when the National Strategy for ESD was released. ESD was specifically identified as an objective of fisheries management in the 1991 Commonwealth Fisheries...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1998-109
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Risk analysis and sustainability indicators for prawn stocks in the Northern Prawn Fishery

This project has been highly successful at determining factors that affect the outputs and outcomes of the model and the uncertainty underlying the model system. The report has been divided into seven broad sections and two Appendices. The first chapter contains the context of the work;...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart

Catch analysis and productivity of the deep-water dogfish resource in southern Australia

Project number: 1998-108
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $95,940.00
Principal Investigator: John Stevens
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 28 Jun 1998 - 30 Aug 2002
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Upper slope dogfishes have been suggested as an alternate resource that could be harvested by some sectors of the SSF; some operators are already targeting these species and this is likely to increase in the future. If ITQs are introduced in the SSF, fishers are likely to have an incentive to target species not under quota control. The dogfish resource is likely to receive increased attention from shark fishers under ITQs and the fact that it is a targeted fishery suggests it could become rapidly over-exploited if no catch controls are introduced. Deep-water dogfish are also caught by trawl, both in the SET and the Great Australian Bight (GAB), and are also taken by dropline. Agreement needs to be sought between sharkMAC, SETMAC, GABMAC and the SEFNTCC on appropriate management of dogfish (Future management options for the Southern Shark Fishery - a report prepared for AFMA by FERM). The five year strategic plan for the SSF incorporates projects on alternate resources, although they are currently listed as a low priority. However, as noted by the Southern Shark Fishery Assessment Group (report to SharkMAC from SharkFAG 24.4.1997) an implication of introducing quotas into the SSF is that there are inadequate data for stock assessment of species other than school and gummy shark.

Trawl surveys of the outer shelf and upper slope off New South Wales have documented a very significant reduction in catch rates of squalid sharks over the last 20 years (Ken Graham, NSW Fisheries Research Institute, personal communication). There is also anecdotal information from fishermen targeting dogfish in New South Wales and Western Australia that catches have declined in the original fishing areas. Evidence from other regions where these deep-water species are fished for their liver oils such as the Philippines, New Guinea and the Azores suggests that local populations can be fished down relatively quickly.

It is possible that deep sea squalid sharks have, because of their suspected low productivity, declined to a similar extent to the orange roughy stocks, now 10-20% of initial levels. This raises the question of the sustainability of present catches. Dogfish are an important component of the deep-water ecosystem and under the Federal Fisheries Act AFMA has a stated objective to manage Commonwealth fisheries in accordance with principles of ecologically sustainable development (ESD). AFMA sees this objective as requiring it to manage fisheries so as to minimise the impact of fishing on biological diversity and ecosystem habitat.

Objectives

1. Estimate the annual retained and discarded catch of deep-water dogfish by geographical area and depth strata within the Southern Shark, Western Australian shark, South East Trawl, Great Australian Bight Trawl and South Australian dropline fisheries.
2. Examine dogfish catch and effort data by region and depth strata for changes in catch rate with time
3. Determine population structure (size distributions and sex ratio) of principle dogfish species by region and depth strata
4. Assess the biological productivity of the major upper and deep slope dogfish species from data on age, growth and reproduction
5. Obtain qualitative estimates of the mortality of the discarded component of the dogfish catch

Final report

ISBN: 1-876996-19-6
Author: John Stevens

Project products

Environment
Environment
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1997-483
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Production of publication "Cephalopods of commercial importance in Australian Fisheries"

The aim of this guide is to help commercial fishers, scientific observers and recreational fishermen to identify the most common cephalopods (cuttlefish, squid and octopus) caught in Australian fisheries. Logbooks kept by commercial and recreational fishers provide essential information for...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
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