4 results
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2016-009
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Aquatic Animal Health and Biosecurity Subprogram: Perkinsus olseni in abalone - development of fit-for-purpose tools to support its management

The project was able to successfully propagate a new P. olseni isolate from Queensland and successfully cultured the isolates from Spain, Japan, New Zealand, and South Australia as well as P. chesapeaki, which was used as a negative control. We were unable to culture the Western Australian (WA)...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) WA
Industry

Abalone Aquaculture Subprogram: improvement and evaluation of greenlip abalone hatchery and nursery production

Project number: 2003-203
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $504,825.00
Principal Investigator: Sabine Daume
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) WA
Project start/end date: 29 Jun 2003 - 1 Jul 2007
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Farmers need to successfully spawn farm-grown abalone for the continuation of the national breeding project (FRDC 2000/201). In addition, farmers need to be able to spawn off-season to allow for multiple batches, to utilise the nursery infrastructure all year around. Hence broodstock needs to be conditioned on site. The long-term effects on abalone spawning success and offspring performance, from formulated diet fed broodstock, need to be assessed and compared to those of animals, which have been feeding on seaweeds (from the wild and conditioned on seaweeds). Animals have been regularly conditioned on seaweeds in other countries like South Africa. Whether a formulated diet enriched with arachidonic acid will improve spawning success and offspring performance and hence whether high levels of arachidonic acid is essential to abalone reproduction, need to be examined.

Farmers need to reduce size variation and weaning mortality efficiently and hence need a cost/benefit assessment of alternative nursery management strategies for animals between 5 and 15 mm. Ideally, they would like to maintain a high stocking density per unit area while maintaining optimal feed availability. However, they would like to know whether it would be just as economic (in terms of improved growth rate and survival) to invest in more nursery infrastructure and maintain a low stocking density. In other words, whether increased growth rates can be achieved by better food availability or lower stocking density, both of which incur greater costs. The improvements over the rest of the growing cycle justify a certain amount of increased cost. The question is how much?

The alternative systems that farmers want to compare are a low stocking density approach where no additional food needs to be provided when animals reach 5mm in shell length, with a high stocking density approach where additional food is provided at that stage. The specific alternative feeding strategies that needs to be compared are: 1) the early removal of animals off plates (at about 5mm) into an intermediate tank system that allows animals to feed on formulated feed versus 2) maintaining animals on plates and introducing another algal food source at the time animal numbers are split between the old and new plates (at about 5mm), thus allowing animals to remain in the nursery system until 15+mm versus 3) current industry practice where animals are fed Ulvella lens and natural diatoms throughout the nursery phase, with new diatom and Ulvella lens-covered plates introduced at 5 mm. The two components are related as egg quality influences larval survival and nursery performance after the non-feeding larval phase.

Objectives

1. To conduct a workshop to identify the experimental strategy most likely to lead to an improvement in current broodstock diets.
2. To determine the differences in spawning success and offspring performance (hatchability, larval survival and settlement) for female abalone conditioned on formulated diets compared to abalone from the wild.
3. To correlate the biochemical composition of eggs with spawning success, larval survival and settlement.
4. To identify individual nutritional components (focusing primarily on fatty acids) that may influence spawning success and offspring performance and test these in newly formulated broodstock diets.
5. To identify suitable algal species (germlings of macroalgae or chain forming, attached diatoms) that promote growth of juveniles between 5-15 mm in shell length.
6. To identify mass culture techniques for the above algae that are commercially practical and easily adopted by industry.
7. To compare alternative nursery management strategies concurrently by conducting an experiment on a commercial facility. To determine the growth rate, size variability and survival of 5mm animals a) transferred into intermediate weaner tanks and fed a formulated feed versus b) maintained in nursery system and fed natural diatoms supplemented with an alga versus c) maintained in nursery system and fed natural diatoms/Ulvella lens all at high animal stocking density compared to d) maintained in nursery system at a low stocking density on natural diatoms/Ulvella lens –see B9 for details.
8. To compare newly isolated algal species for their ability to provide sufficient food biomass for 5-15 mm animals.
9. To undertake a cost/benefit analysis of the alternative nursery management strategies.

Digital video techniques for assessing population size structure and habitat of greenlip and Roe’s abalone

Project number: 2002-079
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $288,213.00
Principal Investigator: Anthony Hart
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) WA
Project start/end date: 30 Mar 2003 - 1 Jul 2007
Contact:
FRDC

Need

To make more reliable projections on future catches of abalone, catch data needs to supplemented with an appreciation of what is coming into the fishery. This requires information on in-water stocks to allow predictions of new recruitment to be confirmed and recruitment failures to be identified.
Commercial divers have unequalled access to in-water stocks, particularly in remote regions. Although commercial divers regularly dive areas of interest, and could provide a cost effective means of monitoring stocks, this has been difficult to achieve because:
1) the traditional process for collecting data is considered non-independent (compromised) in the hands of commercial divers, and
2) divers perceive caliper and slate technology as slow, an undue interference and insufficient in coverage to supply representative datasets.
What is needed is an efficient, cost effective stock monitoring process that utilises commercial abalone divers, around the time of their normal fishing activities, to give fisheries managers and quota holders critical in-water information for the management of stocks. Recent preliminary trials, where researchers utilised digital video surveys filmed by commercial divers, clearly provides the potential for such a process.
Whereas researchers need such footage as a data source, the video also provides a mechanism for divers to 'ground truth' their own perceptions of change on surveyed reefs and convey what they are seeing to licence owners. Most importantly, such a system gives divers a further opportunity to contribute to stock management and reduce licence fees under cost recovery regimes.
Presently, video is played back and measurements are taken on two software packages. This process needs streamlining so that access to frames and measuring of abalone is time efficient. Measures and images generated from such a process need to be stored in an appropriate database, where they can be accessed through simple interrogation.

Objectives

1. Determine the reliability and usefulness of in-water digital video in getting cost effective, fishery independent counts and measures of abalone (as an alternative to traditional manual techniques).
2. To provide a comparison of abundance and stock structure information (between and within years) for main fishing areas videoed.
3. Develop a time (cost) efficient computer program to extract (frame grab) and measure (within frame) abalone on videotape, and a database where images and data from video can be stored, accessed and interrogated.

Final report

ISBN: 1-921258-13-6
Author: Anthony Hart
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