136 results
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1995-014
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Indices of recruitment and effective spawning for tiger prawns stocks in the Northern Prawn Fishery

In the mid to late 1980s NORMAC began to suspect that tiger prawn spawning stocks in the NPF may have been reduced by fishing to levels that reduced recruitment to the fishery. A vessel buy-back scheme and other effort reductions were introduced to reverse this trend but, by the mid-1990s, the...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2014-204
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Implications of current spatial management measures on AFMA ERAs for habitats

In this project, CSIRO researchers implemented the first Australia-wide spatial approach to quantifying the exposure of mapped seabed assemblages to the footprints of Commonwealth demersal trawl fisheries, as well as their spatial protection in areas closed to trawling. These outputs are assisting...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2004-024
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Variation in banana prawn catches at Weipa: a comprehensive regional study

Since about the year 2000 there have been very low catches in the Weipa Region of the Northern Prawn Fishery (NPF); these low catches were different to other areas of the NPF where they continued to fluctuate around long-term means and continued to fall within predicted levels. Industry and managers...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart

Effects of Trawling Subprogram: assessment and improvement of BRDs and TEDs in the NPF - a cooperative approach by fishers, scientists, fisheries technologists, economists and conservationists

Project number: 2000-173
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $786,569.10
Principal Investigator: David T. Brewer
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 29 Dec 2000 - 20 Apr 2005
Contact:
FRDC

Need

From April 15th, 2000, all NPF vessels will be required to use B&Ts in their nets. This constitutes a major change in fishing practice and it is unclear how the catching and economic performance of the fishery will be affected. An accurate assessment of B&T performance will be a vital step towards removing pressure on the fishery from legislation aimed at protecting species and the environment. The Endangered Species Protection Act 1992 and new Commonwealth environment legislation (the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999) will enable effective listings of key threatening processes, of which trawling may again be one. However, if the NPF can demonstrate adequate reductions in catches of vulnerable species due to the use of B&Ts, it may avoid any actions arising from such a listing.

There is an ongoing need for NPF fishers to optimise the performance of B&Ts. The NPF is a large and remote fishery and many fishers still have little or no experience with B&Ts. Hence, there is widespread concern by industry over a lack of preparedness as the 2000 season approaches. This project proposes to continue to develop B&Ts by using the skills and expertise of industry and the other project collaborators in the first and second years after the complusory introduction of B&Ts.

NORMAC has approved a suite of B&Ts for use in the NPF and regulations pertaining to their design and use. These regulations will also provide scope for fishers to develop new exclusion devices. However, an approval process or protocol is not yet defined. This project will design an appropriate assessment and approval process for new B&T designs.

The use of B&Ts may also have implications for fishing effort standardisation based on their potential to change a fisher’s ability to catch prawns. Therefore, it is necessary to accurately measure the change in catches so that adjustments in fleet effort can be made for stock assessments.

It is also important that fishers are convinced that the actual use of B&Ts, rather than just the appearance of use, may be in their economic interest. The purchase costs of B&Ts and any negative effects on the overall performance of the fishing gear or its handling must be viewed by fishers against any economic benefits arising from the use of the devices. This project proposes an economic assessment of the costs and benefits of the introduction of B&Ts.

Objectives

1. To optimise the performance of approved B&Ts on NPF vessels.
2. To identify the factors influencing the performance of B&Ts.
3. To measure any change in catch rates of total unwanted bycatch and in particular, selected charismatic or vulnerable bycatch species, due to the use of B&Ts.
4. To measure any change in catches of commercially important prawns and retained byproduct species due to the use of B&Ts.
5. To assess the economic costs and benefits to industry of the use of B&Ts.
6. To establish a protocol for the ongoing development and testing of new B&Ts.

Final report

ISBN: 1-876-996-45-5
Author: David Brewer
Communities
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-010
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

A re-examination of underlying model assumptions and resulting abundance indices of the Fishery Independent Survey (FIS) in Australia’s SESSF

The model-based Fishery Independent Survey (FIS) for the Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery (SESSF) was developed in the lead up to the first survey in 2008 and is unique in a fisheries context in that it differs from a random stratified design, thereby allowing considerable...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
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