11 results

Integrating recreational fisher experience/satisfaction into decision making

Project number: 2022-170
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $288,822.00
Principal Investigator: Neil Howells
Organisation: Hudson Howells
Project start/end date: 2 Jul 2023 - 30 Sep 2024
Contact:
FRDC
SPECIES

Need

The need for the study is clearly defined in the FRDC terms of reference for the project:

- Fisher experience is regarded as an important measure of defining optimal resource use for non-commercial fishing sectors.
- The lack of recreational fisher experience data has been highlighted at a national level and was explored in FRDC project 2018-161.
- Key fishing stakeholders have identified their desire to include experiential performance indicators into fisheries harvest strategies to optimise the management of available resources in the Northern Territory. This is especially important in fishery management areas where management for optimised recreational outcomes have been prioritised (e.g. Barramundi).
- The need to apply and test existing frameworks for measuring fisher experience (or satisfaction) is necessary to validate their utility in the Northern Territory and more broadly across jurisdictions.
- This includes understanding the interaction between fisher satisfaction/experience and catch settings and other administrative arrangements that may influence fisher experience.

In summary, there are currently no data available that would enable the linkage of experiential performance indicators into fisheries harvest strategies to optimise the management of available resources in the Northern Territory. The objective of this study is therefore to fully explore recreational fisher experience and associated satisfaction levels as they relate to harvest strategies. In simple terms, NT Fisheries is flying blind in this respect and this study is aimed at providing the department with the information they need for informed decision making. Importantly, the report will include recommendations for the implementation of the identified strategies by Fisheries NT.

Objectives

1. To collect comprehensive data on recreational fishers' experiences and satisfaction levels in particular as they relate to NT fishery harvest strategies.
2. To analyse the collected data to identify key factors influencing recreational fishers' experiences and satisfaction levels in particular as they relate to NT fishery harvest strategies.
3. To integrate the findings from the data analysis and interpretation into NT fishery harvest strategies.

Final report

Authors: Howell N Sexton L Knuckey I Maldonado R Ciaravolo D and Dysart K
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2019-106
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Minor use permit for oxytetracycline in non-salmonid finfish

There are no registered or permitted antimicrobial products approved by the Australian Pesticide and Veterinary Medicine Authority (APVMA) for treatment of bacterial infections in finfish. This project developed an application for a minor-use permit (MUP) for the use of oxytetracycline (OTC) to...
ORGANISATION:
University of Adelaide
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2018-097
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Survey of Enterprise-level Biosecurity across the Australian Aquaculture Industry

The Australian Government Department of Agriculture and Water Resources (the department) commissioned the independent research company Instinct and Reason to conduct a survey aimed at farm owners/managers in the Australian aquaculture industry. The survey aimed to investigate the level of...
ORGANISATION:
Instinct and Reason

Ecological modelling of the impacts of water development in the Gulf of Carpentaria with particular reference to impacts on the Northern Prawn Fishery

Project number: 2018-079
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $411,817.00
Principal Investigator: Eva Plaganyi-Lloyd
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Crawley
Project start/end date: 6 Jan 2019 - 28 Jan 2021
Contact:
FRDC

Need

River flow is crucial in the life cycle of prawns that support the Northern Prawn Fishery (NPF), as well as iconic tropical species (e.g. mud crab, barramundi, grunter, and threadfin salmon) of importance to commercial, recreational and Indigenous fisheries, and species with high conservation (e.g. sawfish) and cultural value. Substantial interest in developing irrigated agriculture across northern Australia is reviewed in a recent FRDC report (Kenyon et al. 2018). Water extraction to support agriculture will modify natural flow regimes that support estuarine and coastal fisheries. The trade-offs associated with proposed water resource allocation are currently unknown and research is needed to support decision making related to alternative strategies for managing water resources effectively for both agriculture and marine production and biodiversity conservation. Quantifying these trade-offs entails evaluating how altered river flows might affect the fishery and ecological values. Most work to date has focused on the hydrological rather than ecological aspects (and particularly how to quantify aspects such as the minimum water requirements for ecological components) as managers otherwise need to make decisions without sufficient research and given limited timeframes. Although previous and recent projects such as NAWRA have evaluated the qualitative impacts of changes in river flows on ecological assets, there is a need to quantify impacts both for consideration by affected commercial, recreational, indigenous and other sectors, as well as to provide water resource managers with quantitative estimates such as the minimum water requirements to maintain ecosystem structure and functioning. Such analyses are also complicated by the fact that each catchment is different, and hence models and the associated recommendations need to be tailored to be specific to each catchment area, and there is currently no suitable ecosystem model at the appropriate scale and incorporating key relationships.

Objectives

1. Develop a MICE model that integrates existing data and understanding, and in consultation with stakeholders, to quantify the impacts on key marine species of alternative water extraction scenarios
2. Produce quantitative estimates of the impact of alternative flow regimes on the relative abundance of key fishery and other marine species in the Gulf of Carpentaria, as well as impacts on total fishery catches and value
3. Summarise findings in a technical report and non-technical reports to support sharing findings and engaging in other relevant broader management fora
Final Report • 2022-03-18 • 12.22 MB
2018-079-DLD.pdf

Summary

Using an ecosystem modelling approach, CSIRO in conjunction with colleagues from Northern Prawn Fishery Industry (NPFI), Griffith University and Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries have completed a FRDC study to quantify the impacts and risks to the Gulf of
Carpentaria (GoC) ecosystem of water resource developments (WRD ‐ anthropogenic alteration of freshwater discharge), applied in particular to the Mitchell, the Flinders and the Gilbert River catchments of northern Australia. Key model species include common banana prawns, barramundi, mud crabs, largetooth sawfish as well as mangrove and seagrass habitats

Barramundi origins: determining the contribution of stocking to the Barramundi catch on Queensland's east coast

Project number: 2018-047
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $261,776.73
Principal Investigator: Susannah Leahy
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Project start/end date: 31 Oct 2018 - 31 Jan 2021
Contact:
FRDC
SPECIES

Need

This EOI was developed to address the priority, listed by Queensland RAC in the November 2017 Call for Applications, "To Determine the Proportion of Queensland East Coast (Marine and Estuarine)
Wild Barramundi Catch that is of Hatchery Origin"

- Since 2010 at least 4 million barramundi fingerlings have been released into impounded waterways, coastal lagoons, rivers (and estuaries) of Queensland

- the number of barramundi released annually varies between ~330,000 (2010) and ~794,000 (2015)

- whilst stocked fingerlings may suffer high mortality rates, stocked barramundi do migrate downstream and are caught in the wild-harvest commercial net fishery

- the magnitude of the contribution of stocking to the Queensland east coast population of barramundi is unknown

- this problem has limited quantitative stock assessment of barramundi on the Qld east coast

- DNA parentage analyses is a way to unequivocally identify hatchery origin barramundi and has been developed and validated for barramundi at JCU but it relies on having genotypes of the hatchery broodstock and is expensive per fish

- to be useful for a stock assessment any method needs to be able to be applied over multiple years to provide a time series of data, preferably hind-casting using the historic otolith collections maintained by Fisheries Queensland

- the aim of this project is to develop a cheap and effective method to identify the contribution of stocked fish to current and historic catches (via the Fisheries Queenlsand's otolith collections) to support stock status reporting and quantitative stock assessment

Objectives

1. To develop a near infrared spectroscopy model that can distinguish between wild origin and hatchery origin barramundi
2. To develop an otolith chemistry model that can distinguish between wild origin and hatchery origin barramundi
3. To compare the results from the models developed in #1 and #2 against an established method (genetics) to distinguish between wild and hatchery origin fish in wild caught barramundi
4. To evaluate and complete a cost-benefit analysis of the approaches developed

Final report

ISBN: 978-0-7345-0474-6
Authors: Leahy SM Jerry DR Wedding BBC Robins JB Wright CL Sadekov A Boyle S Jones DB Williams SM McCulloch MT Grauf S Pavich L McLennan M Sellin MJ Goldsbury J Saunders RJ
Final Report • 2022-02-24 • 5.66 MB
2018-047-DLD.pdf

Summary

Researchers from Queensland’s Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, James Cook University, and the University of Western Australia tested a range of otolith-based and genetic methods to identify hatchery-born from wild-born Barramundi. The project took place in the Dry Tropics region, where extensive historical and ongoing impoundment stocking (release of hatchery-born Barramundi into freshwater bodies) may be contributing to the downstream wild-capture marine and estuarine fishery. Fish samples were collected from the commercial and recreational wild-capture marine and estuarine fishery in 2019 and 2020, following the major Townsville floods in February 2019. The team identified a cost-effective means of using trace elements in fish otoliths to reliably distinguish hatchery-origin from wild-origin fish, measure the contribution of stocked fish to the wild population, and assess the sustainability of the wild-capture fishery.
Industry
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-170
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Real time monitoring of water quality and mechanisation of pond management to boost productivity and increase profit

Maintenance of adequate levels of dissolved oxygen (DO) are critical for the health and production of aquaculture species. In barramundi (Lates calcarifer) pond aquaculture the use of 24 hr/7 day mechanical aeration via paddlewheels represents a significant energy cost to companies,...
ORGANISATION:
James Cook University (JCU)
SPECIES
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-109
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Development of Fish Health Indicators for the Gladstone Harbour Report Card

As the link between land and sea environments, estuaries are complex ecosystems vulnerable to human impacts, which directly and indirectly affect plants and animals, including fish. Fish are key biological indicators of environmental contamination, as they are water breathers, common in aquatic...
ORGANISATION:
CQUniversity (CQU) Gladstone
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