Tactical Research Fund: Using innovative techniques to analyse trends in abundance for non-target species
EBFM requires performance indicators for a wide range of species that interact with fisheries, and systems to monitor those performance indicators. However, there is no routine monitoring of the status of the many commercially important byproduct and bycatch species. The assessment of these non-target species remains important in terms of the Commonwealth Harvest Strategy Policy and AFMA have expressed a need for a solution to how to assess the relative status of these species. Such monitoring is required for strategic assessment under the EPBC Act (1997).
Most of non-target species are not under quota and while not directly targeted they can still experience significant fishing mortality and add value to the landed catch. Currently, if they are assessed at all, the assessments merely apply the same strategies as adopted for target species. There is often a perception that CPUE should be disregarded “because the species was not targeted”. There is a need to determine whether alternative methods should be applied to such species that take into account the fact that their catch is incidental to the main activities of the fishers and hence the fishery dependent data for the non-target species will have different qualities. By definition these fisheries are multi-species in nature and this too can complicate their assessment. Technically this is not a trivial problem and more clarity is needed concerning the scope of the issue and how to deal with it. Rather than launch immediately into a relatively long term attempt at finding a solution, a more efficient approach is proposed that involves expert examination and rapid review to map the road ahead. Hence there is a need to conduct workshops aimed at clarifying the management requirements and the most cost effective approach to solving these management issues, which apply to all multi-species data poor fisheries.
Final report
Quantitatively defining proxies for biological and economic reference points in data poor and data limited fisheries
The Commonwealth harvest strategy policy requires the estimation of specific reference points for each stock to which the policy applies. Unfortunately, it is impossible to estimate directly such reference points for many stocks due to limited, or absence of, economic data as well as biological data. In most cases, this is due to the relatively small size of the fishery or the relatively low economic importance of the species concerned, making the routine collection of appropriate data too costly. The current TIER system of assessment only attends to those fisheries that can either have a detailed quantitative assessment (TIER 1), have limited biological data but some ageing data (TIER 3), or have meaningful catch and catch rate statistics (TIER 4). The methods and proxies already in place provide a means of designating a target and limit in terms of catch rates and catches. However, these reference points are only useful for those species for which catch rate data are a meaningful reflection of stock status. There are many species for which catch rates, even if available are very poor performance measures. Alternative methods and proxies need to be developed for even lower TIERs that provide for a consistent and defensible approach across all data poor fisheries. In most of these fisheries, economic data will also be absent, so some consistent means of developing meaningful and defensible target reference points needs to be developed.
Recognizing these needs, ComFRAB called for two related proposals: “Incorporating economics into harvest strategies without bioeconomic models” and “Quantitatively defining proxies for limit and target reference points in data poor fisheries”. Because these two proposals are closely linked and overlap in many ways, we opted to combine them into one single proposal. This will facilitate the team to work closely and reduce the overall project cost.