2,652 results
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 1998-221
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Impoundment stocking strategies for eastern and northern Australia

Fish stocking is a valuable and widely used fisheries management tool. If managed well, a fish stocking program can improve the status of declining or threatened fish stocks, restore species diversity to a degraded waterway, and even create a fishery where there was none before. The positive image...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2014-011
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Direct age determination with validation for commercially important Australian lobster and crab species (western, eastern, southern and ornate rock lobsters, and crystal, Tasmanian giant and mud crabs)

This research project was undertaken by a national collaboration of government and academic scientists representing key Australian crustacean fisheries. The collaborating institutions were the: Marine Ecology Research Centre – Southern Cross University, Department of Fisheries Western...
ORGANISATION:
Southern Cross University (SCU) Lismore Campus
Adoption
People
People

A report on the crab farming industries of Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines

Project number: 1981-065
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Organisation: Linda E Cohen
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1982 - 31 Dec 1982
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Carry out the final phase of an investigation of the portunid crab aquaculture industries of Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines.
2. Evaluate methods for possible future application in Australia

Final report

Final Report • 1982-12-31 • 7.30 MB
1981-065-DLD.pdf

Summary

For centuries, Portunid (swimming) crabs have constituted an important secondary crop in the traditional intertidal fishponds of Asia. The most commonly cultivated crab is Scylla serrata, which is distributed throughout the Indo-West Pacific from eastern South Africa to Hawaii and from northern Australia to southern Japan. It is known as the mud or mangrove crab (Australia), Samoan crab (Hawaii), alimango (Philippines), tsai jim (Taiwan) and nokogiri gazami (Japan). Occasional attempts have been made at pond rearing Portunus pelagicus (sand crab or blue swimmer) and P. trituberculatus (the Japanese blue swimmer or gazami).

Modern hatchery techniques for Portunus are well advanced. P. pelagicus is found over much the same geographic range as Scylla, extending further into colder waters. P. trituberculatus is found in Japan, China, Taiwan and Korea. Important fisheries for all three species exist throughout their areas of distribution.

Final Report • 1982-12-31 • 7.30 MB
1981-065-DLD.pdf

Summary

For centuries, Portunid (swimming) crabs have constituted an important secondary crop in the traditional intertidal fishponds of Asia. The most commonly cultivated crab is Scylla serrata, which is distributed throughout the Indo-West Pacific from eastern South Africa to Hawaii and from northern Australia to southern Japan. It is known as the mud or mangrove crab (Australia), Samoan crab (Hawaii), alimango (Philippines), tsai jim (Taiwan) and nokogiri gazami (Japan). Occasional attempts have been made at pond rearing Portunus pelagicus (sand crab or blue swimmer) and P. trituberculatus (the Japanese blue swimmer or gazami).

Modern hatchery techniques for Portunus are well advanced. P. pelagicus is found over much the same geographic range as Scylla, extending further into colder waters. P. trituberculatus is found in Japan, China, Taiwan and Korea. Important fisheries for all three species exist throughout their areas of distribution.

Final Report • 1982-12-31 • 7.30 MB
1981-065-DLD.pdf

Summary

For centuries, Portunid (swimming) crabs have constituted an important secondary crop in the traditional intertidal fishponds of Asia. The most commonly cultivated crab is Scylla serrata, which is distributed throughout the Indo-West Pacific from eastern South Africa to Hawaii and from northern Australia to southern Japan. It is known as the mud or mangrove crab (Australia), Samoan crab (Hawaii), alimango (Philippines), tsai jim (Taiwan) and nokogiri gazami (Japan). Occasional attempts have been made at pond rearing Portunus pelagicus (sand crab or blue swimmer) and P. trituberculatus (the Japanese blue swimmer or gazami).

Modern hatchery techniques for Portunus are well advanced. P. pelagicus is found over much the same geographic range as Scylla, extending further into colder waters. P. trituberculatus is found in Japan, China, Taiwan and Korea. Important fisheries for all three species exist throughout their areas of distribution.

Final Report • 1982-12-31 • 7.30 MB
1981-065-DLD.pdf

Summary

For centuries, Portunid (swimming) crabs have constituted an important secondary crop in the traditional intertidal fishponds of Asia. The most commonly cultivated crab is Scylla serrata, which is distributed throughout the Indo-West Pacific from eastern South Africa to Hawaii and from northern Australia to southern Japan. It is known as the mud or mangrove crab (Australia), Samoan crab (Hawaii), alimango (Philippines), tsai jim (Taiwan) and nokogiri gazami (Japan). Occasional attempts have been made at pond rearing Portunus pelagicus (sand crab or blue swimmer) and P. trituberculatus (the Japanese blue swimmer or gazami).

Modern hatchery techniques for Portunus are well advanced. P. pelagicus is found over much the same geographic range as Scylla, extending further into colder waters. P. trituberculatus is found in Japan, China, Taiwan and Korea. Important fisheries for all three species exist throughout their areas of distribution.

Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2010-006
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Estimating fishing mortality of major target species and species of conservation interest in the Queensland east coast shark fishery

Fishing mortality rates for the major targeted and byproduct species of sharks landed by the Queensland East Coast Inshore Fin Fish Fishery (ECIFFF) have been estimated. The effects of these fishing mortality rates on population persistence for these species have also been modelled with demographic...
ORGANISATION:
James Cook University (JCU)
Blank
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-122
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Review of fishery resource access and allocation arrangements across Australian jurisdictions

In 2010, the Australian Fisheries Managers Forum listed access and allocation as one of the top priority policy issues to be addressed in Australian fisheries. Subsequently, the Fisheries Research and Development Corporation (FRDC) formed a working group to examine possible approaches to access...
ORGANISATION:
Fishwell Consulting Pty Ltd
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