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Adoption
Environment

The retail sale and consumption of seafood in Melbourne

Project number: 2004-249
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $175,000.00
Principal Investigator: Nick Ruello
Organisation: Ruello and Associates Pty Ltd
Project start/end date: 28 Jun 2004 - 30 Jun 2006
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Many seafood retailers, wholesalers and importers have approached the applicant over the past year for information on aggregate retail sales, main species for in home and out of home consumption and consumer attitudes to various key factors. However we have had to refer people to the National Seafood Consumption Study report of 1992 and the Sydney retail sale and consumption study of 1999. This is an unsatisfactory situation for the industry and government agencies to be in as there have been many changes in Melbourne since 1991 and the Sydney study of 1999 has limited value for those interested in today’s Melbourne scene.

Up to date market and consumer information is also needed to underpin the various industry and species R & D plans and strategies listed on the FRDC website and to provide reliable trade information (qualitative and quantitative) for government agencies and committees developing fisheries and aquaculture management plans.

Given the many changes in eating habits and the business environment (food supply and demand, including aquaculture species) over the past decade there is a need for detailed up to date reliable information on the retail trade and consumption of seafood in Melbourne to to guide the whole supply chain, including fishers and farmers, on consumer wants and attitudes.

The changes in the ethnic mix of retailers and greater use of imported species by these retailers and their customers also warrant research. Industry could also use the data to make better use of the under-utilised species as well as the better known species. There is a growing need to examine consumer attitudes to aquaculture species, animal welfare, food safety, environmental issues and ecolabelling (which are all gaining more media attention each day) and their impact on the seafood trade.

Objectives

1. To measure the quantity and species/types of seafood consumed in home and out of home
2. To document consumer attitudes to key factors affecting seafood purchases and consumption
3. To gather reliable information on the species, source and volume of seafood sold by various types of retail outlets.
4. Examine and document retailers purchases, behaviour and attitudes to key factors (eg wild/farmed)
5. Examine and document the the current status of supply chain management from Victorian fishers and farmers to retailer.
6. Propose actions which can be taken individually and collaboratively by fishers, farmers and others in the whole supply chain to increase sales and consumer satisfaction in a more profitable manner.

Final report

Adoption
PROJECT NUMBER • 1992-092
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Publication of "Proceedings from the 2nd Australasian Scallop Workshop"

The First Australasian Scallop Workshop was held in Taroona, Tasmania in July 1988 and was attended by 51 participants from Australia, New Zealand and Japan. It proved to be a very valuable forum for exchange of ideas on scallop biology, management and culture. The organisers of that workshop, Mike...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1988-074
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Fisheries biology of deep-water crustacea and fin fish on the continental slope of Western Australia

This project sought to investigate the population biology of the commercially important species, primarily crustaceans and finfish, caught in the North West Slope Trawl Fishery (NWSTF) and Western Deep Water Trawl Fishery (WDWTF). This work aimed to measure standing stocks, growth rates, natural...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Cleveland
Communities
PROJECT NUMBER • 2018-172
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Methods to profile and connect the provenance of wild caught prawn fisheries and their values to the community

The wild prawn industry, as a key influencer of the community's (sustainability) perception of the Australian seafood industry, has addressed identified risks to social license so that it can protect its legal license to operate in public waters. This report provides the results and conclusions on...
ORGANISATION:
Australian Council of Prawn Fisheries Ltd (ACPF)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-095
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Australian Fisheries and Aquaculture Statistics 2016

Since 1991 ABARES has annually published detailed production and trade data in Australian Fisheries Statistics (now Australian fisheries and aquaculture statistics) to meet the needs of the fishing and aquaculture industries, fisheries managers, policy makers and researchers. The research undertaken...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2015-229
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Oysters Australia IPA -workshop – identifying knowledge gaps for development of the native oyster aquaculture industry in South Australia

The 2015-229 “Oysters Australia IPA - workshop - identifying knowledge gaps for development of the native oyster aquaculture industry in South Australia” brought together oyster farmers, hatchery operators and scientists from across Australia to share their knowledge and experience with native...
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
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