Tactical Research Fund: Reducing dolphin bycatch in the Pilbara Finfish Trawl Fishery
The bycatch of dolphins and other protected/listed species in the PFTIMF has been recognised as being too high by the WA Minister of Fisheries and the Department of Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts. In 2005, the Minister wrote to industry participants expressing his concern for the “…real or perceived lack of adequate action being undertaken to address this serious bycatch issue…”. He indicated that he was prepared to close the fishery to protect the industry’s reputation should progress not be made. Semi-flexible exclusion grids reduced the dolphin catch rate by almost 50% in 2006, but the Minister has stated that further reductions are necessary if the fishery is to continue.
In 2007, the need for a renewed approach to resolving the PFTIMF bycatch issues were further highlighted in reports from DoF to DEWHA and the Draft Bycatch Action Plan: There are significant differences in bycatch reporting between trips with and without independent observers on board; Observer coverage was set at a minimum 22% to gain data that would prove statistically robust, but only 19% was achieved in the first half of 2007; Temporal/spatial data on bycatch has been collected, but the data has proven inconclusive or has not been analysed in detail; A deck-mounted electronic observer system designed to replace on-board observers has proven unsuitable thus far; and, bycatch continues.
There are both biological and political needs for an immediate effort to further reduce bycatch. Common themes to successful implementation of bycatch reduction include: Collaborations between industry, scientists and resource managers; Pre- and post-implementation monitoring; and, compliance via enforcement and incentives. This project has been designed to conform to these themes and to meet the need of assisting industry in moving from ‘Interim Managed’ to ‘Managed’ fishery status and fulfilling the requirements of the EPBC Act.
Final report
Tactical Research Fund: Evaluating gear and season specific age-length keys to improve the precision of stock assessments for Patagonian toothfish at Heard and McDonald Islands
Accurate estimates of size-at-age and recruitment variability, as well as fishery specific catch-at-age and gear selectivity are critical to the integrated stock assessments for toothfish in the Heard and McDonald Islands toothfish fishery. Otolith analysis represents a powerful method for improving these estimates.
Currently, a growth model based on fish aged from the trawl fishery between 1997 and 2003 is used to predict catch-at-age for trawl and longline catches and year class strength from trawl surveys. This is done by using the growth model to partition numbers at length into age classes. However if there is variation in this relationship between years or between fisheries then the abundances at age may be falsely estimated resulting in poor estimation of stock status. This is an important potential source of bias in current models and should be addressed by developing age-length keys.
Unbiased age-length keys will require analysing sufficient otoliths, collected from a representative sample of size classes captured by the fishery and survey, such that the age composition of the catch, age-based selectivity of fishing gears and the age structure of the stock can be better estimated.
The otoliths aged in 1997-2003 were sampled primarily to develop a growth model, and are not suitable for evaluating season and gear-specific age-length keys. The majority of age-length estimates currently available result from analysis of otoliths collected before the longline fishery (which catches larger fish than the trawl fishery) commenced, so very few otoliths from larger fish or from longline grounds have been analysed. Furthermore, much of the ageing performed in the past occurred before the latest validation data for toothfish was available.
Hence there is a need to construct age-length keys across gear types and seasons, and conduct sensitivity tests to evaluate the impact of gear and interseasonal variability in assessments.