Comparative evaluation of Integrated Coastal Marine Management in Australia - Workshop
There is widespread evidence, in Australia and internationally, of increased need for an improved, practical approach to integrated management (IM) of fisheries and other coastal marine activities that is able to fully embrace the social, economic and institutional aspects (the so-called ‘human dimensions), of management. Assessment and management systems traditionally neglect the human dimensions. Further, they treat sectors separately, often with different authorities managing diverse activities in different ways, resulting in inconsistencies in management across activities. The result is that there is almost no consideration of the cumulative social, economic or ecological impacts of multiple activities, and no way of informing trade-offs among activities in management decision-making.
Experience to date is that IM has been only partially successful. Management of multiple activities has been additive…squeezing one activity in among others (e.g aquaculture in light of others). While there are some examples of movement toward IM, these have resulted in partial or temporary success. There are examples where management has started toward IM, but progress has been stalled or has fallen back. In general, many preconditions exist, but it has been hypothesized that management is missing key aspects of intentional design that would allow IM to proceed.
The proposed workshop will bring together those with both the science knowledge and the operational knowledge of 8-10 Australian IM case studies and a few with international expertise, to evaluate and compare experience towards identifying key elements of success and failure of Integrated Management.
Final report
Project products
Cumulative impacts across fisheries in Australia's marine environment
Shared science and Indigenous knowledge to support fisheries capacity building in Torres Strait
Production of publication "Cephalopods of commercial importance in Australian Fisheries"
Final report
The aim of this guide is to help commercial fishers, scientific observers and recreational fishermen to identify the most common cephalopods (cuttlefish, squid and octopus) caught in Australian fisheries. Logbooks kept by commercial and recreational fishers provide essential information for fisheries research and management; however, for the records to be useful the catch must be correctly identified, especially in any developing fishery.
Malcolm Dunning of Fisheries Group, Department of Primary Industries, Queensland, prepared the tropical sepiid and Photololigo pages, while Vicki Wadley prepared the other sections. The cephalopod specimens for this guide were collected by CSIRO and QDPI scientific staff on commercial and research vessels. They were caught by demersal trawling, jigging and seine netting.
After landing, the freshly dead cephalopods were photographed on the vessels. The cephalopods were then frozen, and later preserved in the laboratory. A single specimen of each species was chosen for illustration in colour. Many squid were badly damaged from trawling and have been illustrated to reflect this. Line drawings, or published illustrations, were used for some species. The specimens have been deposited in the Museum of Victoria, Melbourne, and the CSIRO fish collection in Hobart.