2 results

A pilot investigation of northern shark liver oils: characterisation and value-adding

Project number: 1999-369
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $35,846.47
Principal Investigator: Peter D. Nichols
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 6 Sep 1999 - 24 Mar 2002
Contact:
FRDC

Need

To maximise the return to fishers and wider areas of the Australian fishing industry better use of existing resources is needed. Southern fisheries have recently seen development of several marine oil based products. The potential may exist for a similar approach with northern fisheries, in this case specifically northern sharks.

Presently there is to our knowledge little information available on the oil composition of the livers from northern sharks. A prerequisite therefore in the consideration of the development of possible marine oil products is the characterisation of the oil resource. The proposed pilot project aims to address this key need. The proposed research aims to assist the fishing industry maximise the return on northern and other shark species at whatever levels are determined to be sustainable.

Objectives

1. Characterise liver oils from northern sharks (NT, WA, Qld), including examining possible changes with location, season and other factors. The key components to be examined will be the omega-3 PUFA and vitamins.
2. Provide initial comment on the potential commercial usefulness of the liver oils from northern sharks.

Final report

ISBN: 1-876-996-05-6
Authors: Peter Nichols Mark Rayner and John Stevens

Review of Australia's pelagic shark resources

Project number: 1998-107
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $19,437.00
Principal Investigator: John Stevens
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 28 Jun 1998 - 23 Mar 2000
Contact:
FRDC
SPECIES

Need

Along with a growing international concern over the status of pelagic shark stocks, the by-catch of pelagic sharks in Australia's tuna longline fisheries is a management issue which is rapidly gaining momentum. There is a need to collate available information on Australian stocks which can serve as the starting point of an information base for management, should this be necessary.

Currently there are restrictions on the landing of shark fins by Japanese vessels fishing inside the EEZ unless the whole carcass is landed, but no such restrictions apply to domestic vessels. At present there is only a small demand for pelagic shark meat. There is, however, some recent interest in target fishing for pelagic sharks and this raises issues over the activation of latent effort if suitable markets are developed for the meat. No specific research has been carried out on pelagic oceanic sharks in Australia and nothing is currently known about the level of fishing which the stocks can support. While logbook information on pelagic shark catches is probably of limited value there is a considerable volume of catch and size data collected through the observer program; these data have not been subject to any detailed analysis.

In assessing the impacts of fishing on pelagic sharks in Australia, there is a need for information on movements and stock structure. Some limited tagging of blue and mako sharks has been carried out by the principle investigator in his own time out of Hobart. Some interesting recaptures have resulted such as a blue shark recaptured from Java and mako sharks recaptured near Lord Howe Island. The opportunity now exists to tag pelagic sharks (mainly blue sharks) at minimal expense using observers on Japanese longliners. While results are unlikely in the time frame of this 6 month study, on-going recaptures should provide valuable information for future studies of pelagic sharks.

Pelagic sharks are one of the 1997/98 research priorities for STBMAC under the category of ecologically related species.

Objectives

1. Document the species found in Australian waters and describe their local and broader distributions
2. Document Australian and overseas catch rates and catches
3. Review their biology in terms of productivity, spatial structure, movements and stock structure
4. Review information on population dynamics, stock status, vulnerability to fishing and management of these species from areas where they are fished.
5. Where possible, determine the impacts of fishing on the stocks in Australian waters using logbook and observer catch and effort data
6. Tag blue sharks on Japanese longliners operating inside the AFZ through the observer program
7. Make recommendations for future research on pelagic sharks in Australia