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Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2001-042
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Development of the tools for long term management of the giant crab resource: data collection methodology, stock assessment and harvest strategy evaluation

The project has developed tools for low cost assessment of the giant crab resource across southern Australia. Stock assessment and management response is now increasingly based on biomass estimates from this project. Risk of poor management decisions is thus reduced, which...
ORGANISATION:
University of Tasmania (UTAS)
SPECIES
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-057
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Stock predictions and spatial population indicators for Australia's east coast saucer scallop fishery

This project undertook analyses to understand the role of overfishing and the environment on saucer scallops. The analyses indicated reduced numbers of spawning scallops. Historical levels of fishing and environmental influences such as from increased sea surface temperatures (SST) have amplified...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2008-775
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood CRC: A one day workshop to define oyster ‘condition’ and to review the techniques available for its assessment.

The workshop was held under the auspices of the Select Oyster Breeding Company of New South Wales (SOCo) and Australian Seafood Industries (ASI), companies involved with selective breeding programs for Sydney rock and Pacific oysters respectively. Its aim was to clarify and consolidate the views of...
ORGANISATION:
Australian Seafood Industries Pty Ltd (ASI)

Collection of biological data required for management of the blue swimmer crab fishery in the central and lower west coasts of Australia

Project number: 1997-137
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $197,800.43
Principal Investigator: Ian Potter
Organisation: Murdoch University
Project start/end date: 21 Dec 1997 - 13 Aug 2001
Contact:
FRDC

Need

There is a critical need to develop a management policy for the blue swimmer crab fishery in Western Australia, that is based on sound biological data collected for this species in this state. Since the environments in which blue swimmer crabs are caught in Western Australia are unique, it is essential that detailed biological data of this species are collected specifically for these waters. The type of biological data that are required include information on the habitat requirements, size and age composition, growth and reproductive biology of this crustacean species. Reliable data on some of these aspects (size and age composition and reproductive biology) are essentially confined to those obtained for the Peel Harvey Estuary and to those derived from catches obtained in Cockburn Sound, using a trawl net with a large mesh (Potter et al., 1983; Penn, 1977; FRDC project 95/042). From a comparison of data in these latter studies, it would appear that crabs grow to a larger size or live longer in marine waters than in estuaries. There is thus an urgent need to obtain more precise information on the biology of blue swimmer crabs in the different habitats in the marine habitats in south-western Australia.

There are no biological data for blue swimmer crabs in Shark Bay, where the fishery is developing and has great potential. Shark Bay is located at a far more northern latitude than the Peel-Harvey Estuary and Cockburn Sound, and is characterised by far warmer water temperatures. Furthermore, there are essentially no estuaries near Shark Bay, which means that this type of area which is often used as a nursery ground is not available to this portunid in the region of Shark Bay. The presence of far warmer temperatures in Shark Bay, which will presumably influence the activity, feeding, growth and reproductive biology of this species (see e.g. Hill, 1980; Sukumaran & Neelakantan, 1996), together with the type of environment found in that region, mean that it would be very dangerous to extrapolate from the results of studies further south in temperate Western Australia, or indeed from elsewhere in Australia.

It should be noted that the biological data produced by this proposal will complement a separate study of the dynamics of the fishery (both commercial and recreational) and exploitation of the series of stocks which contribute to the catch of blue swimmer crabs in Western Australia. This project proposal by the Fisheries Department Research Division, will be submitted to the FRDC in December 1997 for the 1998/99 round of grant proposals.

References

Hill, B.J., 1980. Effects of temperature on feeding and activity in the crab Scylla serrata. Marine Biology 59: 189-192.

Penn, J.W., 1977. Trawl caught fish and crustaceans from Cockburn Sound. Rep. Dep. Fish. Wildl. West. Aust. 20: 1 24

Potter, I.C., P.J. Chrystal & N.R. Loneragan, 1983. The biology of the blue manna crab
Portunus pelagicus in an Australian estuary. Mar. Biol. 78: 75 85.

Sukumaran, K. K. & B. Neelakantan, 1996. Relative growth and sexual maturity in the marine crabs, Portunus (Portunus) sanguinolentus (Herbst) and Portunus (Portunus) pelagicus (Linnaeus) along the southwest coast of India. Indian J. Fish. 43: 215-223.

Objectives

1. The main overall objective is to determine those biological parameters for blue swimmer crabs in selected water bodies in south-western Australia and in Shark Bay that are crucial for undertaking stock assessment necessary to develop management arrangements for this crustacean in those two regions.
2. Determine the habitat types occupied by the blue swimmer crab in the marine and estuarine environments in which it is relatively abundant in south-western Australia, and the way in which the habitat requirements change with body size and state of maturity.
3. Determine the age and size compositions and growth of populations of blue swimmer crabs in different water bodies in south-western Australia (Leschenault Estuary, Koombana Bay, Peel-Harvey Estuary, Comet Bay and Cockburn Sound).
4. Determine the size and age composition, growth rates, size of maturity and reproductive season of blue swimmer crabs in Shark Bay.
Industry
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2019-036
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Implementation of dynamic reference points and harvest strategies to account for environmentally-driven changes in productivity in Australian fisheries

The need to adapt stock assessment methods and harvest strategies to explicitly and justifiably account for shifts in productivity has been recognised by the AFMA Resource Assessment Group for the Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery (SESSF), not least as a result of clearly evident...
ORGANISATION:
Pisces Australis Pty Ltd
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