164 results
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2012-702
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood CRC: innovation in traceability for the Australian seafood industry” Austral Fisheries/Northern Prawn fishery case study

Austral fisheries have identified the need for establishing the efficacy and efficiency of establishing an electronic traceability system for their seafood products. An ideal system would also provide real time monitoring of temperature and location from point of harvest to retail sale and...
ORGANISATION:
Curtin University
Environment
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1984-023
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

A study of the sand crab (Portunus pelagicus) and its exploitation in a sub-tropical multi-sector fishery

Based on logbook records the sand crab commercial pot fishery in Moreton Bay is worth in the vicinity of $2 million wholesale annually. Sand crabs are also taken as an incidental by-catch by otter trawlers and in addition Moreton Bay supports a substantial recreational fishery. Sand crabs are caught...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2002-239
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Rock Lobster Post Harvest Subprogram: the effect of on-board cold water stunning on the survival and growth of caught and returned western rock lobsters (Panulirus cygnus)

The relative recapture rates of returned stunned and unstunned lobsters have been quantified. Apparently conflicting results were obtained from two different areas of the fishery, but the results were deemed inconclusive due to low numbers of recaptures from water surrounding the Southern Group of...
ORGANISATION:
Geraldton Fishermen's Co-operative Ltd
Environment
People
PROJECT NUMBER • 1983-067
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Second Australian National Prawn Seminar

Since the First Australian National Prawn Seminar in 1973, Australian prawn fisheries have grown in size and value to become Australia's most valuable fisheries resource. In the same period the number of people involved in the fishing industry, research and management has also increased. Major new...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Cleveland
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2009-019
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Evaluating the potential use of change-in-ratio and index removal techniques for determining harvest rates and efficiency increases in the Western Rock Lobster Fishery

This project developed and explored methodology intended to enable the production of more reliable estimates of fishing efficiency increases and harvest rate, such that these estimates might be available for use by fisheries scientists, thereby improving the quality of the management decisions...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) WA
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1997-101
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Assessment of broad-scale exploitation rates and biomass estimates for the Tasmanian southern rock lobster fishery

Exploitation rate is an important fishery assessment parameter linking catch to legal-sized biomass, the portion of the stock available for harvest. Relative change in legal-sized biomass is a crucial performance indicator for the fishery as it measures the success of management...
ORGANISATION:
University of Tasmania (UTAS)

Assessment of the Victorian rock lobster fishery

Project number: 1992-104
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $293,823.00
Principal Investigator: Ross Winstanley
Organisation: Agriculture Victoria
Project start/end date: 2 May 1993 - 22 Jun 1998
:

Objectives

1. To obtain biological information on southern rock lobsters across Victoria particularly size at maturity size/age specific fecundity, growth and migration patterns.
2. To evaluate methods for estimating the size of southern rock lobster populations
3. To determine the recreational impact on the resource.
4. To assess the current status of the fishery for southern rock lobster in Victoria.
5. To determine biological and population characteristics of rock lobster off the Appollo Bay reion, Victoria

Final report

ISBN: 0-7306-6290-X
Author: Ross Winstanley
Final Report • 1998-04-27 • 51.66 MB
1992-104-DLD.pdf

Summary

The southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsit) is fished commercially in south-eastern Australia and New Zealand. The Victorian annual catch is currently 458 tonnes with a landed value of $14.5 million representing 10.6% of total rock lobster landings in south east Australia (ABARE 1997). Over eighty percent of Victoria's catch is taken in the Western Management Zone (from the South Australian border to Apollo Bay).

Catch rates in the Victorian fishery have shown a steady decline from 2.5 kg/potlift in the 1950's to 0.47 kg/potlift in 1996/93 (Anon 1997). Since this time, the Western Zone catch rates have stabilised at around 0.5 kg/potlift (Anon 1997). The Ea.stem Zone catch rate declined steadily until 1992/93, and has shown some stabilisation over the past two years a.nd is currently around 0.3 kg/potlift (Anon 1997).

Investigation of the biology of the species in Victoria highlighted the differences between the two management zones particularly with respect to size composition of the commercial catch, size at onset of sexual maturity (SOM), movement and growth.

Keywords: Southern rock lobster; Jasus edwardsii; abundance estimation; size at maturity; fecundity; recreational catch; stock assessment; growth; tagging.

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