172 results
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2019-103
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Strategic Planning Workshop for Yellowtail Kingfish Stock Assessment in South-Eastern Australia

The project facilitated cross-jurisdictional and cross-sectoral discussions on aspects of the Eastern Australia biological stock of Yellowtail Kingfish. Several knowledge gaps relating to biological and life-history parameters, as well as reliable data on the recreational fishery across all...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2003-209
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood CRC: Sydney rock oysters: overcoming constraints to commercial scale hatchery and nursery production

Objectives: 1. To establish protocols for improved broodstock conditioning and handling, particularly to permit out-of-season spawning of selected oyster stocks. 2. To determine the effects of the key autecological factors (temperature and salinity) and nutrition on SRO embryos and larvae, to...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2019-016
PROJECT STATUS:
CURRENT

Estimating the biomass of fish stocks using novel and efficient genetic techniques

This project represents the first detailed study exploring the relationship between eDNA concentrations and the biomass and/or abundance of some economically and ecologically important (primarily freshwater) fish species in Australia. The work was conducted over four-and-a-half-years as part of a...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2019-027
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Improving and promoting fish-trawl selectivity in the Commonwealth Trawl Sector (CTS) and Great Australian Bight Trawl Sector (GABTS) of the Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery (SESSF)

This project sought to produce the first-ever review of technical options for improving fish-trawl selectivity around the planet and then use this information to address a deficit in experimental work quantifying the utility of industry-developed and new selective-gear modifications in the...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)

Assessment of the crab fisheries in New South Wales [also referred to as the Spanner Crab Project].

Project number: 1986-063
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $40,432.75
Principal Investigator: Steve J. Kennelly
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)
Project start/end date: 28 Jun 1990 - 29 Nov 1994
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Determine biological parameters for each crab species
2. Present levels of exploitation in NSW
formulate management regimes for NSW waters (incl maximising compatibility with those of neighbouring States).

Final report

Author: Steven J. Kennelly
Final Report • 1990-12-31 • 3.11 MB
1986-063-DLD.pdf

Summary

For this very new fishery, those aspects of the species' biology most relevant to its management and continued exploitation are its distributions, abundances and rates of growth. Unfortunately at the start of this project/ we knew none of this information for the NSW stock. As a first step I designed/ completed/ analysed and wrote up for publication a series of manipulative field experiments designed to determine the best sampling strategy for estimating the distributions/ abundances and rates of growth of spanner crabs. These experiments involved estimating the relative abundances of this species in the fishing grounds (10m to 100m depth off the NSW far north coast) using catch per unit of effort data from baited tangle traps. Multifactorial/ orthogonal and nested experimental designs were used to determine the best kind of frame/ mesh-size and ply of net, method of hanging nets and the type of bait to catch the greatest number and widest sizerange of crabs (see Kennelly & Craig/1989 - paper 1 in the attached list). Another paper (Kennelly, 1989 - paper 2) describes similar experiments to determine optimal soak-times/ in addition to applying cost-benefit and analysis of variance techniques to a pilot survey to determine optimal numbers of replicates and sets of replicates. The work reported in these 2 papers resulted in the development of an optimal sampling strategy which was used to determine the relative abundances of spanner crabs of the widest possible size-range.

People
Industry
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 1996-355
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Review of shellfish purification technology research and development

Depuration in the context of this report can be defined as the process by which harvested shellfish are placed in land based plants containing clean estuarine water to permit the purging of their gastrointestinal contents under controlled conditions. Depuration does not include the practice of...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)
Environment
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2016-200.20
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Growing a profitable, innovative and collaborative Australian yellowtail kingfish aquaculture industry: Bringing white fish to the market - RnD4Profit-14-01-027

This project focused on growing the key existing Australian Yellowtail Kingfish (YTK) industry participants, as well as the industry as a whole, and directly addressed FRDC's strategic plan to build Australian sustainable aquaculture development through the activities of the new 'New and Emerging...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)
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