7 results

National Workshop to develop a regional collaborative plan to control the invasive Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii)

Project number: 2022-075
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $30,000.00
Principal Investigator: Ian Dutton
Organisation: Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania (NRE TAS)
Project start/end date: 31 Jan 2023 - 31 May 2023
Contact:
FRDC

Need

There is a need to review and update the existing body of research and management approaches to:
1. prevent the further expansion of Long Spine Sea Urchins onto new reefs
2. reduce the impacts of Long Spine Sea Urchins on existing reefs to facilitate recovery
3. promote commercial harvesting as a control effort

Facilitating this review process through a workshop is necessary to ensure that all key stakeholders in New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, the Commonwealth have input into:
• identifying R&D gaps
• sharing and agreeing (where possible) on objectives
• contributing to the design of a coordinated, regional approach to mitigate and manage the impacts of Long Spine Sea Urchins

Objectives

1. Synthesise and update information on Long Spine Sea Urchins (and consider examples from other invasive species)
2. Understand gaps in the knowledge
3. Assess the benefits of current research and management activities against conservation and commercial objectives
4. Identify the steps necessary to develop a coordinated, regional approach to mitigate and manage the impacts of Long Spine Sea Urchins

Final report

Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Project products

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 
Final Report • 2023-05-01 • 11.78 MB
2022-075_National Centrostephanus Workshop_Final Report_May2023.pdf

Summary

The 2023 National Centrostephanus Workshop was convened by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania. The workshop brought together 130 representatives from industry, government, research, Aboriginal communities, recreational fishing groups, and the community to:

• Identify challenges and opportunities related to Longspined Sea Urchin across regions.

• Identify the R&D gaps across the Longspined Sea Urchin range.

• Foster cross-jurisdictional and inter-sectoral relationships, as well as information sharing for improved management outcomes.

• Contribute to the design of a coordinated regional approach for the sustainable management of Longspined Sea Urchin.

 

The workshop included over thirty presentations from researchers, commercial divers, recreational divers, industry, and businesses. These explored the current state of Longspined Sea Urchin (Centrostephanus rodgersii or “Centro”) range expansion, marine ecosystem health across Tasmania, Victoria and NSW, potential controls, and interventions to manage densities below key ecological thresholds, strategies to rehabilitate damaged ecosystems, potential new markets for Centro as a food product, and productive utilisation of waste from food processing. A series of facilitated workshops were held to identify risks, opportunities, actions and research priorities.

Plan • 2023-09-30 • 1.35 MB
2022-075_230922_FINAL_Centro_Plan.pdf

Summary

This high-level national five-year business plan is the result of extensive collaboration, taking into account diverse stakeholder needs, industry insights, research, modeling, and ongoing activities. The goal is to establish a versatile investment framework, enabling customised approaches on a regional scale. This approach ensures that the unique needs and challenges of each state and jurisdiction are addressed effectively. 

Larval dispersal for Southern Rock Lobster and Longspined sea urchin to support management decisions

Project number: 2019-130
Project Status:
Current
Budget expenditure: $242,861.00
Principal Investigator: Katie A. Cresswell
Organisation: University of Tasmania
Project start/end date: 31 Aug 2020 - 28 Feb 2023
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Commercial in confidence. To know more about this project please contact FRDC.

Objectives

Commercial in confidence
Industry
Adoption
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-049
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Monitoring abalone juvenile abundance following removal of Centrostephanus and translocation

A new system of Abalone recruitment modules (ARMs) have proven to be successful in collecting juvenile abalone in Tasmanian waters. This design was subsequently transferred to the Eastern Zone, Victoria, where IMAS staff and Eastern Zone Abalone Industry Association (EZIZA) members installed ARMs at...
ORGANISATION:
University of Tasmania (UTAS)
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