Attendance at the Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations, Tenure and User Rights Conference in Yeosu, Korea 10 to 14 September 2018
Minor use permit for oxytetracycline in non-salmonid finfish
Strategic Planning Workshop for Yellowtail Kingfish Stock Assessment in South-Eastern Australia
Yellowtail Kingfish is a high priority species for recreational fishers and the basis of an important commercial fishery in NSW. The biological stock structure is reasonably well understood, with genetic analyses showing that the population in Western Australia is genetically distinct from the population along the eastern and southern Australian coasts (Commonwealth, Queensland, New South Wales, Victorian, Tasmanian and South Australian waters) and New Zealand. Tagging studies have confirmed movements between Australia and New Zealand and South Australia to NSW. Therefore Yellowtail Kingfish are assessed through the Status of Australian Fish Stocks (SAFS) initiative at the biological stock level, being two stocks - Eastern Australia and Western Australia.
The most recent (2018) SAFS assessment for the Eastern Australian biological stock of Yellowtail Kingfish was ‘Undefined’, due mainly to knowledge gaps around the degree of mixing throughout this stock which spans more than 3,000 km of coastline. Reasonable data for assessment exists only within NSW, and uncertainty around whether an assessment of that component of the stock reflected the entire stock resulted in an ‘Undefined’ status, with a recommendation that this uncertainty be resolved.
Yellowtail Kingfish within NSW has been assessed as ‘Growth Overfished’ (2003/04 to 2013/14), and current evidence indicates a Depleted stock. There are ongoing discussions within NSW about appropriate management changes that may assist recovery; however these are hampered by the ‘Undefined’ status in SAFS.
The FRDC National Priority 1 aims to reduce the percentage of ‘Undefined’ stocks within SAFS, which also has an objective of providing a roadmap to recovery for ‘Depleted’ stocks. To address both of these and to promote better and more collaborative monitoring, assessment and management across all relevant jurisdictions, there is a clear need to review existing knowledge across the entire stock and to identify areas of uncertainty that require addressing.
Final report
Evaluation of point of care (POC) tests for White Spot Syndrome Virus (WSSV)
Total annual production of prawns in Australia in 2016/2017 was approximately 21,000 tonnes, valued at $310 million. Aquaculture production was 4,624 tonnes valued at $85 million and wild harvest production was 20,982 tonnes valued at $310 million. The 2016 WSD outbreak in QLD prawn farms highlighted the need for enhanced biosecurity measures to protect this important industry.
Following the outbreak, the FRDC AAHBS convened a workshop in November 2017 to identify the WSD Research and Development needs of governments and industry to support surveillance, biosecurity and production. The workshop identified a project concept for improved WSSV diagnosis, with a focus on providing capability for rapid on-farm pathogen detection. In farmed prawns WSD can result in 100% mortality within days of infection, making it imperative that farms are able to rapidly identify WSSV and implement emergency control measures.
There are several commercially available POC testing platforms for WSSV, however, there is currently no comparative test performance data to support the use of these WSSV POC tests in Australia for detection of WSSV in clinically-affected prawns. This project will determine the following important information:
• Analytical and diagnostic performance characteristics of three commercially available immunochromatographic WSSV POC test kits.
• Analytical and diagnostic performance characteristics of two commercially available real-time PCR based WSSV POC testing platforms.
• A comparative performance evaluation of the above POC tests to NATA accredited WSSV qPCR assays.
This information is critical for policy-makers, regulators and industry to successfully implement WSSV POC testing on Australian Prawn farms.