15 results
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1976-018
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Ballast water investigations

Ships' ballast water was sampled on 28 occasions in four ports between November, 1976, and October, 1978. A 100.,u plankton net was hand hauled vertically 5 times in each tank. Eight non indigenous species were obtained: 6 copepods, 1 mysid and 1 amphipod. A further 14 species of...
ORGANISATION:
NSW Department of Primary Industries
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1985-071
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Redfish tagging study, New South Wales

The purpose of this report is to describe the methods used for tagging redfish and discuss the results achieved by the various segments of the project. In conjunction with the tagging study, data on commercial catches of redfish, fishing effort and catch length frequency were also analysed, and the...
ORGANISATION:
NSW Department of Primary Industries
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1986-065
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Yellowtail kingfish stock identification

The Kingfish Stock Identification Project was instigated in 1985 to provide information on the stock structure of yellowtail kingfish relevant to management. At that time, the N.S.W. catch had more than doubled since 1982 to approximately 360 tonnes per annum and concern was expressed at the...
ORGANISATION:
NSW Department of Primary Industries
Environment
Environment
Environment

Assessment of the crab fisheries in New South Wales [also referred to as the Spanner Crab Project].

Project number: 1986-063
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $40,432.75
Principal Investigator: Steve J. Kennelly
Organisation: NSW Department of Primary Industries
Project start/end date: 28 Jun 1990 - 29 Nov 1994
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Determine biological parameters for each crab species
2. Present levels of exploitation in NSW
formulate management regimes for NSW waters (incl maximising compatibility with those of neighbouring States).

Final report

Author: Steven J. Kennelly
Final Report • 1990-12-31 • 3.11 MB
1986-063-DLD.pdf

Summary

For this very new fishery, those aspects of the species' biology most relevant to its management and continued exploitation are its distributions, abundances and rates of growth. Unfortunately at the start of this project/ we knew none of this information for the NSW stock. As a first step I designed/ completed/ analysed and wrote up for publication a series of manipulative field experiments designed to determine the best sampling strategy for estimating the distributions/ abundances and rates of growth of spanner crabs. These experiments involved estimating the relative abundances of this species in the fishing grounds (10m to 100m depth off the NSW far north coast) using catch per unit of effort data from baited tangle traps. Multifactorial/ orthogonal and nested experimental designs were used to determine the best kind of frame/ mesh-size and ply of net, method of hanging nets and the type of bait to catch the greatest number and widest sizerange of crabs (see Kennelly & Craig/1989 - paper 1 in the attached list). Another paper (Kennelly, 1989 - paper 2) describes similar experiments to determine optimal soak-times/ in addition to applying cost-benefit and analysis of variance techniques to a pilot survey to determine optimal numbers of replicates and sets of replicates. The work reported in these 2 papers resulted in the development of an optimal sampling strategy which was used to determine the relative abundances of spanner crabs of the widest possible size-range.

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