52 results

Stock structure of Pristipomoides multidens resources across northern Australia

Project number: 1996-131
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $60,177.25
Principal Investigator: Julie A. Lloyd
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 29 Dec 1996 - 30 Mar 2001
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To investigate the stock structure of Pristipomoides multidens in northern Australian waters, in order to assist in the development of appropriate management plans for the deepwater snapper fisheries of NT and WA

Final report

Long-term abundance index for goldband snapper in the Timor Sea - A pilot study

Project number: 1994-155
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $67,859.85
Principal Investigator: David Ramm
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 29 Mar 1995 - 30 Mar 1997
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Develop techniques for obtaining repeatable indicies of relative abundance for goldband snapper (Pristipomoides spp.), and other selected groundfish, applicable to habitats commonly found in the Timor Sea including the Timor Box
2. Obtain additional information on the spatial and seasonal distribution of goldband snapper and other groundfish in the Timor Sea

Evaluation of non-trawl harvest methods for red snapper in northern Australia

Project number: 1994-154
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $74,875.79
Principal Investigator: David Ramm
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 10 Apr 1995 - 18 Mar 1997
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To evaluate catch rates and size rangesof red snapper and other commercial species under selected harvest method
2. To evaluate ease and cost of operating selected harvest methods
3. To evaluate extent of environmental impact of selected harvesting methods
4. To assess commercial viability and environmental acceptability of selected harvest methods

Final report

ISBN: 0-7245-3008-8
Author: Dr David Ramm; Mr Richard Mounsey

Identification and mapping of barramundi nursery swamp habitat in the Chambers Bay/Finke Bay area.

Project number: 1994-144
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $18,471.10
Principal Investigator: Roland Griffin
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 29 Mar 1995 - 31 Dec 1995
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To assess the precise location and characteristics of barramundi nursery swamps in areas between the Wildman and Adelaide Rivers

Pearl oyster aquaculture: health survey of NT, WA and Qld pearl oyster beds and farms

Project number: 1994-079
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $266,135.00
Principal Investigator: Colin C. Shelley
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 22 Jun 1994 - 1 May 2002
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Detect and document the serious diseases and significant pathogens of farmed pearl oysters in WA, NT and QLD
2. Develop a database of pearl disease, location and prevalence that can assist both government and farmers in making informed decisions about translocation of stock

Final report

ISBN: 0 7245 3052 5
Author: Colin Shelley
Final Report • 1999-01-08 • 2.54 MB
1994-079-DLD.pdf

Summary

A comprehensive health survey of pearl oysters Pinctada maxima was undertaken across northern Australian marine waters in a collaborative project between fisheries organisations and pearl producers in Northern Territory (NT), Queensland (Qld) and Western Australia (WA). The majority of animals examined in the study represented mature animals from the wild or from pearl culture farms from NT, Qld and WA (4502 animals). The study also reports on 22 batches of 150 spat, examined after spending a minimum of 6 weeks in open water sites in WA as part of the regulatory controls in place controlling oyster movements in the State. A low number of mature and immature animals examined for disease investigations and following placement in sea cages/panels in NT were also included in the study.

The study established the occurrence, prevalence and distribution of a taxonomically diverse range of microbial, protozoan and metazoan agents associated with pearl oysters in Australian waters and, within the limits of the study, ascribed pathogenic significance to these agents. In some cases, the prevalence and distribution of agents identified in earlier studies were established. The majority of animals examined were free from infectious agents which may adversely impact upon oyster growth and pearl production. A proportion of oysters carried agents which were not considered significant pathogens. A number of microbial, protozoan and metazoan agents were identified in the shell matrix or in the tissues of the oyster which were considered to have potential to adversely impact upon the breeding, rearing and production of pearl oysters in Australian tropical waters.

Pathogenic or potentially pathogenic agents identified in mature P. maxima from clinically normal populations in the study included a papova‐like virus of the palp associated with epithelial hypertrophy and cilia loss, viral‐like inclusion bodies in the digestive gland associated with tubular degeneration, enigmatic protozoan‐like bodies associated with severe degenerative and inflammatory lesions in the digestive gland of mature oysters and a copepod associated with oesophageal occlusion and epithelial erosion. The shell matrix was also a target for potentially pathogenic boring bivalves, invasive sponges and mudworms, resulting in shell denaturation and blistering.

In the first 6 weeks of exposure of juvenile oysters to the marine environment in WA, a Haplosporidian sp. with high morbidity was detected, together with a heart apicomplexan, palp virus, rickettsiales‐like agent in the digestive gland, viral‐like inclusion bodies in the digestive gland, a copepod in the digestive gland, Ancistrocomid‐like ciliates in the alimentary tract and gills.

Sequential examination of batches of juvenile oysters up to 23 weeks after placement in the sea in panels in the NT demonstrated progressive colonisation by a range of unidentified protozoan and metazoan organisms.

Examination of diseased mature and juvenile oysters in NT associated mortalities with Vibrio spp., an enigmatic protozoan‐like agent and abnormal environmental parameters.

A number of agents showed marked differences in distribution between states and between regions within states. The establishment of a restricted geographic distribution of potentially pathogenic agents in Australian P. maxima provides a basis on which rational quarantine may be implemented to avoid introduction of deleterious agents or pests when considering translocations or introductions of oyster stocks from different regions within Australia.

The study established normal histological criteria for P. maxima and defined a range of host responses to injury. These studies provide a basis on which the normal structure of the pearl oyster may be differentiated from the structure altered by disease, thus establishing criteria for disease diagnosis in pearl oysters. The normal histological criteria and histopathological changes associated with infectious and non‐infectious conditions found in the study are to form the basis of an FRDC atlas of pearl oyster morphology and pathology.

The study included a comprehensive review of infectious and non‐infectious agents, conditions and disease states of pearl oysters Pinctada spp. This review provides an international comparative basis on which to diagnose infections and disease states in Australian oysters and also provides an international perspective if introductions from elsewhere are contemplated.

All findings of the study have been collated on a relational database which can be utilised to determine the prevalence, occurrence and distribution of all agents and conditions identified and by which correlations between variable factors and specific agents or conditions can be made. It is intended that the database be made available to interested parties.

The study provides essential baseline data on disease occurrence and prevalence and a basis for the diagnosis of infectious and non‐infectious diseases of P. maxima. Avenues for further investigation of infectious agents are suggested.

Keywords: pearl oysters, Pinctada maxima, health survey, populations, pathogenic significance, regulatory controls, serious diseases, detection

Towards the sustainable use of NT fishery resources

Project number: 1994-033
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $4,475.00
Principal Investigator: David Ramm
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 29 Jun 1995 - 30 Jun 1997
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Enhance stock assessment expertise and processes in the R&D Branch of the Fisheries Division
2. Introduce a fresh 'state of the art' outlook on stock assessment
3. Review and improve stock assessments and management strategies for all major NT fisheries
4. Enhance the sustainable use of NT fisheries resources including those shared with QLD, WA and Indonesia

Age structure of the commercial catch of Northern Territory narrow-barred Spanish mackerel

Project number: 1994-015
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $18,662.00
Principal Investigator: Rik C. Buckworth
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 29 Mar 1995 - 29 Jun 1998
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Provide an estimated age structure for catches in the NT troll mackerel fishery for the 1991 to 1993 fishing seasons, for extension of population assessment to include an age-structured population model
2. Verify the growth relationships currently in use for stock assessment, or provide the information from which a new relationship might be developed

Increasing the marketability of commercial northern shark by eliminating the incidence of tough flesh

Project number: 1993-190
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $74,439.00
Principal Investigator: Steve L. Slattery
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 25 Sep 1993 - 30 Jun 1996
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To increase the marketability and value of the two major commercial species of northern shark by eliminating the incidence of toughness of flesh

Maximising economic returns in the NT spanish mackerel fishery

Project number: 1992-125.24
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $26,307.36
Principal Investigator: Steve L. Slattery
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 3 Mar 1996 - 10 Nov 1998
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To assess the impact of bleeding , gutting and deheading on the quality of spanish mackerel
2. To determine the impact of spiking and icing on the onset of rigor in spanish mackerel
3. To evaluate the effect of storage on ice on the shelf life and sensory properties of spanish mackerel
4. To assist in the preparation of a Code of Practice for the capture, handling and packaging of chilled spanish mackerel

Non-trawl capture of prawns: the commercial feasibility of trapping

Project number: 1992-010
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $42,225.00
Principal Investigator: Rik C. Buckworth
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (NT)
Project start/end date: 21 Nov 1992 - 30 Jun 1994
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To examine the effect of combination of trap design baits and setting periods on catch rates from traps
2. To evaluate the commercial feasibility of prawn trapping operations
3. To examine the size and selectivity of trap designs particularly in comparison with catches of small prawns by otter trawls
4. To ascertain and evaluate differences in quality between trapped and trawled prawns with particular reference to those destined for export live
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