5 results

Investigation and improvement of live Blue Swimmer Crab handling in NSW

Project number: 2018-024
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $102,107.00
Principal Investigator: Paul Exley
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Project start/end date: 1 Apr 2019 - 27 Aug 2020
Contact:
FRDC

Need

As the NSW fishing industry moves forward into the future with quota managed fisheries, there is a need for industry to develop procedures and process on catching, holding and transporting Blue swimmer crab that would value add to the wild harvest sector’s product – particularly for the live sales market.

The current market is predominantly made of sales of cooked and raw blue swimmer crabs. An approx. price range of blue swimmer crab for 2015 / 2016 was $8.50 $9.00 per kilo. The live trade in blue swimmer crab in 2016 / 2017 is approx. $20.00 per kilo. A move to selling into the live market would provide a better return for effort and would help in maximizing return on investment in the blue swimmer crab quota fishery.

The “Live Blue Swimmer Crab” trade is in its infancy and it is timely to invest in technologies that will assist in lowering the mortality rates of these animals. Any investment now will accelerate the development of this fishery and ensure the best chance for the restructure of the NSW fishery to achieve its goals.ie viability and efficient use of a quota species.

The industry needs to have an easy to read handling guideline developed and training workshops to improve their access to the market and reduce mortality rates.

Objectives

1. To produce handling guidelines and conduct a series of industry training workshops to reduce the mortality rate of blue swimmer crabs and thereby increase the volume of live product to market
2. To improve fishermen returns who adopt the guidelines and undertake the training provided

Final report

Author: Paul Exley and Donna Cawthorn
Final Report • 2025-02-19 • 2.65 MB
2018-024-DLD.pdf

Summary

This report presents pivotal findings from an in-depth investigation into optimising live handling practices for the commercial Blue Swimmer Crab  (Portunus armatus) industry in New South Wales (NSW), with the overarching goal of unlocking high-value live trade opportunities. Initiated in 2019, the research was conducted by an experienced team of scientists at the Queensland Department of Primary Industries (DPI) in Coopers Plains, Brisbane. The primary objective was to develop effective handling protocols to improve the survival rates of Blue Swimmer Crabs from capture to market, thereby increasing the volume and quality of crabs available for sale. The study combined extensive literature review, laboratory trials and stakeholder engagement to provide a practical framework for fishers wishing to pursue the live Blue Swimmer Crab market, focusing on methods to reduce stress, minimise mortalities and maximise marketable yields.

Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-047
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Understanding environmental and fisheries factors causing fluctuations in mud crab and blue swimmer crab fisheries in northern Australia to inform harvest strategies

This project investigated relationships between environmental factors and harvests of crabs in the Gulf of Carpentaria (GoC), northern Australia. Desktop correlative analyses clearly indicated that recent fluctuations in the catches of Giant Mud Crabs in the GoC are most likely driven by...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)

Fisheries biology and assessment of the blue swimmer crab (Portunus pelagicus) in Queensland

Project number: 1998-117
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $246,840.00
Principal Investigator: Wayne Sumpton
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Project start/end date: 20 Jun 1998 - 25 Jul 2003
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Queensland's fishery for blue swimmer crabs is managed conservatively. Fishers are allowed to take only males, and the size limit (15 cm carapace width) is set at above 85% of L infinity. South Australia, Western Australia and New South Wales currently market female crabs. There is considerable contrast available between management regimes and therefore scope to consider the possible economic gains and biological risks associated with these alternative strategies.

Stock assessment leading to the development of optimal management strategies was one of the key objectives of the National Blue Swimmer Crab Research Strategy. Therefore, current information on growth, mortality, movement and size structure of the catch in Queensland (both commercial trap and trawl sectors, and the recreational sector) needs to be collected and incorporated into yield models and more comprehensive population models which allow the risks and gains of alternative management strategies to be evaluated.

The only significant research into Queensland blue swimmer crab stocks that has been conducted since 1987 (See Reference List in Background) has been the analysis of daily commercial catch and effort from logbook records (CFISH). However, there has been concerns about the accuracy of the CFISH crab data. There have also been major changes in the fishery, including reported increases in trawl catches and a decline in both catch and CPUE in the trap fishery. The fishery has also expanded into new areas which were not covered in previous research and is in fact still expanding.

Megalopa collectors have proved successful for collecting portunid megalopa in North America (Lipcius et al, 1990; Olmi, 1990; Olmi et al 1995) and are a routinely used method of fishery indepenndent survey in the US blue crab (Callinectes sapidus) and other crab fisheries which have similar life histories to our blue swimmer crab. Similar methods are used in predicting year class strength of the Western rock lobster and other fisheries in Australia. There is a need to undertake pilot work to develop and trial collectors for quantitatively collecting blue swimmer crab megalopae. If blue swimmer crab megalopae can be collected on artificial collectors then these techniques may have application in a fisheries context, as they are in other crab fisheries around the world.

Objectives

1. To determine key biological parameters (growth, mortality) of blue swimmer crabs in Queensland
2. To determine the impact (if any) of environmental variables on blue swimmer crab catch.
3. To produce models which describe the impacts of alternative managment strategies.
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