151 results

Live transport of crustaceans in air - prolonging the survival of crabs

Project number: 1992-071
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $100,832.33
Principal Investigator: Brian Paterson
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Project start/end date: 11 Oct 1992 - 25 Jan 1996
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To increase knowledge of the techniques required for successful live transport of crabs destined for live export or domestic markets
2. To put this knowledge to commercial practice in developing guidelines and protocols

Final report

Author: Brian Paterson
Final Report • 1995-01-09 • 4.60 MB
1992-071-DLD.pdf

Summary

We studied the live transport of crustaceans in air, using the spanner crab Ranina ranina as an example, and developed guidelines for handling live spanner crabs which we presented to an industry workshop. Our findings were also of general relevance to the live shipment of other oceanic crab species.

The spanner crab fishery has burgeoned over the last couple of years through interest in the live market. The choice of spanner crabs as a topic of study was therefore timely. The handling practices used on boats in this fishery, (storing crabs out of water) , were appropriate for handling "live" crabs destined for cooking but we found that more careful handling was required for the live export market.

While spanner crabs appeared to tolerate being stored in air, our studies showed that this tolerance was misleading. The crabs stressed quickly when they arrived on deck and became quiescent. Their blood pH fell rapidly, a symptom called acidosis. Quiescence was their only means of dealing with acidosis.

In practical terms, any time that a spanner crab was out of water was too long. Spanner crabs are stored in air twice after harvest, first while on the boat and again when actually exported. The conditions experienced by the crabs stored in air at ambient temperature on boats were much worse than those of crabs cooled for export. At the very least, the crabs should be cooled down or sprayed with cold seawater when stored in air on boats. The best way to store crabs on boats would be submerged in live wells- but there are problems with this because the unrestrained crabs can injure each other.

We also tested other methods of alleviating stress. Spanner crabs cannot buffer low pH in the blood, unlike many other commercially harvested crustaceans. We sought to correct this using a dip treatment. However, this did not improve their survival . For an animal that cannot correct acidosis, spanner crabs survive for an extraordinary period in air. The stressed crabs may linger on because they "shut down" and keep the acidosis from reaching fatal levels.

Using the results of our research, we presented guidelines for handling spanner crabs at an industry workshop on December 9-10th 1993 . This workshop attracted favourable comment from the industry and copies of several papers were published in the May edition of Queensland Fisherman.

We concluded that the way the crabs are currently being handled on boats is too stressful. Physiological studies show that spanner crabs, like other oceanic crabs, are not well equipped to survive in air. Yet even if you store them cold on the boat they still die after a few days in tanks on shore. This mortality is an impediment to the maturity of the industry. The crabs may be succumbing to bacterial infections caused by injury and we recommend that their claws are immobilised by banding after capture.

People
PROJECT NUMBER • 2012-011
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Revolutionising fish ageing: Using Near Infrared Spectroscopy to Age Fish

Results from the current ‘proof of concept’ study indicate that near infrared (NIR) spectra collected from fish otoliths have potential to estimate the age of Barramundi (Lates calcarifer) and Snapper (Pagrus auratus), with performance varying between species and locality of capture. A...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Adoption
PROJECT NUMBER • 1992-125.30
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Making the most of the catch: a forum for Industry

The papers published in this book were all presented at the Symposium "Making the Most of the Catch..." held in Brisbane, Australia, 25-27 July 1996. The contributors came from many countries and from many different institutions. They were selected in an endeavour to present a broad spectrum of...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2014-242
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Commercialising the production of Cobia in Australia

This project is a collaboration between the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (DAF) and the Cobia aquaculture sector, predominantly Pacific Reef Fisheries (PRF). It was undertaken to consolidate the aquaculture in Australia of Cobia, a species offering considerable potential as a...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
SPECIES
Environment

Custom training and technical support for the fishery stock assessment software ‘stock synthesis’

Project number: 2018-168
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $77,220.00
Principal Investigator: Michael F. O'Neill
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Project start/end date: 31 Mar 2019 - 29 Jun 2020
Contact:
FRDC

Need

The Queensland Government Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (DAF) aims to manage fisheries utilising the best available science taking into account environmental, economic, social and cultural impacts.
Through the Government’s Sustainable Fisheries Strategy (SFS, 2018–2020), plans are actioned to establish regular stock assessments (ongoing annually or at least every two years) to provide the science for assessing key fishery stocks against reference points.
To conduct regular stock assessments of finfish, Fisheries Queensland and the SFS expert panel have directed DAF staff to investigate the use of off-the-shelf stock-assessment models. This recommendation is for delivery of recurring information to support fishery harvest strategies; and followed a review to support the use of common stock assessment methods and models (FRDC Research Code: 2014-039; http://www.frdc.com.au/media-and-publications/fish/fish-vol-26-3/skills-shortage-forecast-for-stock-assessments). This proposal is to progress Qld’s adoption of FRDC recommendations and research: project 2014-039.
DAF’s training needs are by 31st May 2019.
The aim for this training is to build stock assessment systems for DAF and help support similar national needs in Australia.

Objectives

1. DAF scientists to learn SS methodology and assumptions.
2. After 5-day course, DAF scientists to be proficient in the use of SS software with R
3. Produce 3–4 updated DAF finfish stock assessments through the 5-day course
4. Publish on success, outputs and findings of SS
5. Improve speed on future reassessments of fish stocks

Final report

ISBN: 978-0-7345-0464-7
Authors: M. F. O’Neill R. Lovett P. Bessell-Browne S. Streipert G. Leigh A. Campbell A. Northrop J. Wortmann F. Helidoniotis W.-H. Yang M. Holden and S. French.
Final Report • 2020-02-01 • 2.75 MB
2018-168-DLD.pdf

Summary

This is a report on ‘stock synthesis’ software training by CSIRO. Noted are training outputs and learnings, together with an assessment of what role stock synthesis (SS) may play in Department of Agriculture and
Fisheries (DAF) fish stock assessments. Findings suggest SS could potentially assess 50–60% of the fish species currently listed for Queensland stock assessment.
Reports on SS herein represent initial views after training. SS views may change in time with individuals, and with more use and learnings of the software.
Environment
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 1994-017
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Development of a northern Australian squid fishery

Squid are an increasing component in the reported byproduct of commercial prawn and finfish trawlers in northern Australian shelf waters and interest has been shown by Queensland and Northern Territory fishers in developing target fisheries for squid using jigs. In general, squid caught on jigs or...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Industry
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