18 results

Tactical Research Fund: A collaborative approach to novel by-catch research for rapid development, extension and adoption into a commercial trawl fishery

Project number: 2009-069
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $74,970.00
Principal Investigator: Cameron Dixon
Organisation: SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
Project start/end date: 28 Feb 2010 - 30 Aug 2011
Contact:
FRDC

Need

This study is seen as a platform that will pave the way for a committed ongoing program of assessing, refining and ultimately adopting bycatch mitigation strategies in temperate South Australian prawn fisheries. This project was conceived from a high priority need to develop and test enhanced gear technologies that aim to: 1) reduce the incidental capture of bycatch species and 2) reduce the capture of small prawns. Both have the potential to maximise the value of the resource. This need was highlighted in the recent Gulf St Vincent prawn fishery (GSVPF) assessment report (Roberts et al., 2009).

The GSVPF is about to embark on a bycatch risk assessment process that will include a bycatch survey (March 2010), which will provide a unique opportunity to conduct this research in parallel at a significantly reduced cost.

This project will provide a template that utilises current fishery-independent trawl surveys to test new gear technologies. This work would follow on from previous valuable catch selectivity research (square mesh), and will provide management and industry with options for the way forward in terms of bycatch mitigation. This project will evaluate the effectiveness of novel trawl mesh (T90) at optimising catch selectivity and will be underpinned by pilot trials to be conducted at the expense of industry and SARDI. Furthermore, valuable underwater footage of operational trawl nets will be captured for the purpose of informing and optimising current and future net modifications / BRD trials (gear and bycatch behaviour). Information on species-specific trawl vulnerability, behaviour and differences in gear designs would augment the ecological risk assessment that the industry are undergoing.

Objectives

1. To provide a platform to test and develop enhanced gear modifications that minimise bycatch in temperate prawn trawl fisheries
2. To evaluate catch selectivity (prawn size and species-specific bycatch composition) of conventional diamond vs novel trawl mesh (T90) of two configurations
3. To capture underwater video footage of operational demersal trawl nets (conventional and modified) in a temperate prawn fishery to inform and optimise current and future net modifications / Bycatch Reduction Device (BRD) trials (gear and catch behaviour)

Final report

ISBN: 978-0-7345-0420-3
Author: Cameron Dixon
Environment
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2015-019
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Refining a Nordmøre grid to minimise the incidental catch of cuttlefish and crabs in the Spencer Gulf Prawn Fishery

This report presents the findings of bycatch reduction device (BRD) trials undertaken for the Spencer Gulf Prawn Fishery (SGPF) in South Australia using a ‘Nordmøre-grid’—a type of BRD that mechanically separates organisms based on size and/or morphological differences....
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2005-077
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Assessment of the implications of interactions between fur seals and sea lions and the southern rock lobster and gillnet sector of the Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery (SESSF) in South Australia

This report provides the most comprehensive appraisal of the risk posed by bycatch to subpopulations of Australian sea lions and New Zealand fur seals, by the SA rock lobster and gillnet sector SESSF fisheries. Further it has identified the research required to ensure that SA rock lobster and the...
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2016-055
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Field trials to experimentally test if alternative sea lion excluder devices (SLEDs) adequately prevent Australian sea lions from entering rock lobster pots

This project tested the efficacy of two new sea lion excluder devices (SLEDs) in preventing entry of seals into southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) pots designed by fishers from the South Australian Northern Zone Rock Lobster Fishery (NZRLF). Since 1 November 2013, the use of a spike SLED has...
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1994-029
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

A collaborative investigation on the usage and stock assessment of bait fishes in southern and eastern Australian waters, with special reference to pilchards (Sardinops sagax neopilchardus)

This project was initiated in response to a rapid increase in the demand for pilchards and other baitfish species and the subsequent expansion of purse-seine fisheries throughout southeastern Australia. During the course of the proj ect, the need for research on pilchard stocks was further increased...
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2011-062
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Tactical Research Fund: a reporting framework for ecosystem based assessment of Australian prawn trawl fisheries

This Tactical Research Fund Project has been undertaken by SARDI Aquatic Sciences in response to the Spencer Gulf Prawn Fishery’s (SGPF) need for an ecosystem-based reporting framework to support ongoing Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certification. We reviewed the relevant literature to...
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
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