9 results
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2018-017
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Demand Conditions and Dynamics in the Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery: Empirical Investigation

This final report, a collaboration between economists from CSIRO, CQU and ABARES, is the first detailed analysis of the interrelationship between fish prices on the Sydney and Melbourne fish markets. In addition, the study derived empirical estimates of the own and cross-price flexibilities for the...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2014-203
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

SESSF Monitoring and Assessment – Strategic Review

The Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery (SESSF) is a multi-species, multi-gear, multijurisdictional Commonwealth fishery. It is a fishery of substantial economic and social importance to Australia, as a key provider of high quality fish products to Australian markets. More than 600...
ORGANISATION:
Australian Fisheries Management Authority (AFMA)

Development and application of a combined industry/scientific acoustic survey of Orange Roughy in the Eastern Zone

Project number: 1999-111
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $263,136.09
Principal Investigator: Rudy Kloser
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 30 Mar 1999 - 14 Aug 2002
Contact:
FRDC

Need

The primary need is to remove the uncertainty surrounding the status of the orange roughy stock by performing a combined CSIRO high precision research vessel and industry surveys of the Eastern zone during the 1999 spawning season. Following reanalysis of available information, most recent assessment indicates reduction of catches by 50% or even closure might be necessarry to meet AFMA's performance criteria for this fishery. However, recent catch and effort data (that is not used in the assessment), recent ageing data, and fisher's observations together suggest that the assessment may no longer accurately represent the population dynamics of the roughy. If these observations can be substantiated by an accepted biomass assessment (requring industry and CSIRO cooperation to get coverage plus precision), the potential savings to the industry are 1000-2000 t quota at say $4/kilo = 4-8 million per year.

There is a second need, to assess the ability of industry sounders to monitor the state of the resource. Industry monitoring of the stock could prove less costly than high precision scientific surveys. However a number of questions remain unanswered regarding industry vessel acoustics precision and sensitivity. Clearly industry-based surveys need to be carried out with calibrated sounders and to conduct biological sampling of fish marks with fin-mesh liners in the codends. However further questions remain regarding the precision that can be obtained from vessel-mounted systems that are susceptible to sea state, vessel noise and stability. To what extent then do industry sounders have the ability to map schools and relative biomass over a given season?

To test the power of the industry sounders requires a controlled experiment. This can be achieved by conducting acoustic surveys simultaneously with the common 28 kHz industry sounders and the scientific 38 kHz vessel-mounted and towed systems. This was attempted in 1996 in an opportunistic manner. However, a logger borrowed from the industry and set up on the Southern Surveyor's 28kHz echo sounder soon failed, so no useful data were collected. A more rigorous attempt to incorporate industry acoustics is required.

Objectives

1. To assess the biomass of orange roughy based on acoustic surveys on the Eastern Zone fishing grounds during the spawning period using industry vessel acoustics over an extended period and the CSIRO acoustic package during the anticipated peak spawning period.
2. To assess how industry acoustics may be best used in the long term management of the resource.
3. To compare the sensitivity and precision of acoustic surveys using scientific vessel-mounted and towed-body acoustics and industry vessel-mounted acoustics.
4. To further develop the acoustic method by improving the multi-frequency technique for species identification.

Final report

Stock structure of Australian populations of orange roughy using microsatellite analyses

Project number: 1997-118
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $32,100.00
Principal Investigator: Ross Crozier
Organisation: La Trobe University Melbourne Campus
Project start/end date: 22 Jun 1997 - 26 Jun 2002
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Despite the past studies, the question of the stock structure of Australian orange roughy remains unresolved. Broadly, the evidence supports the concept of somewhat localised stocks although with some inter-stock migration - it is really the extent of the migration that remains unknown.

Current management plans are largely based on the premise that southern Tasmanian fish are from a distinct stock from St Helens Hill fish, yet evidence in favour or opposing this proposition is weak.

We propose here an analysis of the stock structure of Australian orange roughy based on the examination of DNA microsatellites. DNA microsatellites will enable a more powerful analysis of genetic stock structure than has hitherto been possible. The study will focus on the relationships of fish from eastern Australia (New South Wales, St Helens Hill, southern Tasmania) but will also examine samples from the Tasman Sea (in particular Lord Howe Rise), New Zealand, and, as a presumably reproductively isolated population, the North Atlantic.

Objectives

1. To develop DNA microsatellite genetic markers for orange roughy
2. To use these markers to delineate stocks of orange roughy from Australian waters
3. To use these markers to compare Australian samples with New Zealand samples.
4. To use these markers to compare North Atlantic samples with Australasian samples

Final report

View Filter

Research

Species