2 results

Effects of trawling subprogram: effects of trawling on the benthos and biodiversity - development and delivery of a spatially-explicit management framework for the Northern Prawn Fishery

Project number: 2005-050
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $916,630.00
Principal Investigator: Rodrigo H. Bustamante
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 29 Sep 2005 - 28 Feb 2009
:

Need

Recent assessments of the NPF have identified a need for the fishery to be managed at a finer spatial scale than that of the NPF managed area (AFMA 2003, DEH 2003). The stocks of some prawn species appear to comprise regional subpopulations that, although not genetically isolated, mix little enough to be manageable as separate stocks. This view is consistent with the experience that depleted stocks in some regions (e.g. north of Mornington Island and Weipa) have not recovered when stocks elsewhere in the NPF were healthy.
The assessments also identify a need to broaden the scope of management of the NPF beyond prawn stocks, iconic species and bycatch to include benthic habitats and species. Prawn fishing has a number of impacts on the ecosystem, including: removal of target species; removal of bycatch and byproduct; removal of benthic plants and animals; removal of habitat-forming species; disruption of sediment structure; suspension of sediment; and feeding of dolphins, sharks, seabirds, fish and benthic invertebrates with discards (Poiner et al. 1998). Some impacts, such as removal of seagrass in nursery habitats, are known to negatively affect prawn stocks. Other impacts are likely to affect stocks in unknown ways, positively or negatively, and in some habitats may affect the sustainability of the stocks.
Broadening management of the NPF to include impacts on benthic ecosystems is therefore prudent from both an environmental and industry viewpoint. It is also consistent with the recommendations of the NPF strategic assessment (DEH 2003), and will prepare the industry for the increasingly sophisticated environmental awareness of export markets.
Management of the NPF is currently based on sound stock assessment and population monitoring procedures, and uses maximum sustainable yield as the management limit reference point. Spatial stock assessment has been investigated with mixed success, but is not used operationally. Current environmental management focuses on fragile habitats (mainly seagrass), prawn spawning areas, iconic species (e.g. turtles) and bycatch. Recently, ABARE suggested a move towards economic efficiency targets, such as maximum economic yield. (Rose and Kompass 2004).
To do this the FRDC project 2004/022 will integrate the existing stock and economic assessments into an MSE process.
To enable stock, economic and environmental objectives to be effectively pursued in a spatial context and with minimal conflict, the stock, economic, bycatch and ecosystem components of NPF management must be integrated into a single, spatially explicit management framework. This project will contribute with major missing elements for that integration and will develop this needed spatial management framework. Equally, the timing of this proposal is opportune given that stock assessment and monitoring are already mature, interactions with iconic species and bycatch are becoming well understood, and the integration of stock assessment with economics is currently underway. To achieve highly effective technical communication and integration we will involve PIs from past and present projects and a Steering Committee with members from CSIRO AFMA staff and NORMAC-REC and NPF-RAG members.

Objectives

1. Determine the accumulated effects of trawling on benthic community state and composition.
2. Quantify key benthic ecosystem processes of importance to prawn production and biodiversity along a trawl intensity gradient.
3. Develop, and provide for adoption management strategy evaluation tools for benthic ecosystem impacts.
4. Design and delivery of a spatially explicit management framework for the NPF.

Final report

ISBN: 978 0 643 10380 1
Author: Rodrigo Bustamante

Designing, implementing and assessing an integrated monitoring program for the NPF

Project number: 2002-101
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $466,513.00
Principal Investigator: Cathy M. Dichmont
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 26 Nov 2002 - 30 Apr 2004
:
SPECIES

Need

An international review of the NPF tiger prawn assessment agreed with the conclusions of the 2001 assessment that tiger prawn levels are critically low, especially for brown tiger prawns. It highlighted the critical need for an independent monitoring program given the confounding and complexities of the catch rate data used as the sole index of abundance in the NPF assessments.

The survey data used to determine the initial design for this project (see Background) is more than a decade old and does not cover the full study area. Therefore the initial surveys will be largely exploratory in nature and very much a trial to see if the proposed design is effective. Also, the survey design includes integrated components such as the assessment of long-term changes in fishing power and the contraction of the fishery over time that have not been undertaken in prawn survey designs (both nationally and internationally) before. These aspects highlight that this project has a large research component, which has as a major output, not just the survey results itself, but recommendations for a final design, analyses and scale of future survey requirements.

Half the project is therefore seen as research. For this reason, CSIRO is supporting the project to the scale of about $100,000. A similar amount is being applied for from FRDC’s MOU funds using the matching $100,000 from industry i.e a total of about $200,000. The remainder of the project, some $270,000 will be underwriten by the industry as agreed in NORMAC, March 2002 with a possible $100,000 initial seed contribution by AFMA. The industry and NORMAC have also in principal supported the long-term need for regular industry-funded monitoring surveys based on the output of this project.

There is a need to provide an updated design for the NPF that would work in the long-term to provide indices of abundance to key species and enhance a difficult-to-use commercial catch rate series. Furthermore, this design needs to address target, byproduct, bycatch and possibly some effects-of-trawling issues to make the best use of the surveys, as they will be a large expense to the industry.

Objectives

1. To determine the final design and analyses for two surveys in the Gulf of Carpentaria
2. To undertake a survey in September to determine whether there has been a spatial contraction of the tiger prawn resource
3. To undertake a survey in January/February that will provide a recruitment index of the main commercial prawn species in the Gulf of Carpentaria
4. To determine the appropriate scale and frequency of future surveys
5. To spatially map the distribution of the main prawn species in the Gulf of Carpentaria

Final report

ISBN: 1-876-996-43-9
Author: Catherine Dichmont
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Research