7 results
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
Communities
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-010
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

A re-examination of underlying model assumptions and resulting abundance indices of the Fishery Independent Survey (FIS) in Australia’s SESSF

The model-based Fishery Independent Survey (FIS) for the Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery (SESSF) was developed in the lead up to the first survey in 2008 and is unique in a fisheries context in that it differs from a random stratified design, thereby allowing considerable...
ORGANISATION:
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2014-203
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

SESSF Monitoring and Assessment – Strategic Review

The Southern and Eastern Scalefish and Shark Fishery (SESSF) is a multi-species, multi-gear, multijurisdictional Commonwealth fishery. It is a fishery of substantial economic and social importance to Australia, as a key provider of high quality fish products to Australian markets. More than 600...
ORGANISATION:
Australian Fisheries Management Authority (AFMA)

Development of harvest strategies for selected SEF species

Project number: 2000-101
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $128,294.00
Principal Investigator: Tony D. Smith
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 16 Oct 2000 - 15 Mar 2004
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Given AFMA’s need to satisfy its ESD objective, there is a need to consider uncertainty explicitly and identify performance indicators and harvest strategies that are as robust as possible to incorrect assumptions and misinformed interpretations of data. Use of these indicators and harvest strategies will improve the chances of achieving a reasonable balance between the conflicting objectives of long-term resource sustainability and the maximisation of economic gains.

The project also addresses to some extent two key research areas in subprogram (B) of the Wild Stock Program of the SCFA Research Committee: “Biological and socio-economic evaluation of alternative management scenarios for different species and categories of fishery to provide a framework for management planning” and “The evaluation and provision of harvest strategy models through comparison of management strategies using theory and case studies, establishing objective performance indicators for different jurisdictions and identifying options which are appropriate to the nature of the fishery”.

FRDC project 98/102 has already identified several areas where there is considerable uncertainty. However, that project has focussed on ‘generic’ data-poor species (although tailored to some extent to the actual situation for jackass morwong, pink ling, tiger flathead and spotted warehou, species that have been identified as ‘high' and 'medium' priority by SEFAG). Ideally, harvest strategy calculations should be tailored to particular species to achieve optimal outcomes. This project will evaluate harvest strategies for the four species that received initial focus in FRDC 98/102. FRDC 98/102 also focused on situations in which the fishery is based on a single gear-type only. However, it is increasingly being realised within SEFAG that even within the trawl sector there are sub-fleets, each of which differ substantially in terms of their selectivity. For example, for blue warehou, the trawl fleet off New South Wales has a selectivity pattern closer to that of the non-trawl fleet based at Lakes Entrance than that of the trawl fleet based in Portland.

One of AFMAs legislative objectives relates to providing cost-effective management. Increasingly industry is being expected to bear some of the costs associated with the monitoring on which stock assessments and hence TACs are based. There is therefore a need for an objective process for determining the trade-off between monitoring costs and the ability to which AFMAs management objectives are satisfied. The aim of this study is to examine this question within the scope of the trade-off between catch and risk.

Finally, there is a major need for stock assessment on more species in the SEF. However, although data for many species is poor, there are nevertheless fewer assessments than there could be due to a lack of software for conducting the increasingly complicated assessments demanded by stakeholders. FRDC 98/102 has developed software modules for implementing several commonly applied stock assessment methods (including “Integrated Analysis” – the basis for the current assessments for blue grenadier, school whiting, eastern gemfish, and blue warehou). If the detailed output from the software that implements these assessment methods could be available in an easily useable and visual form, this software could provide a better basis for conducting routine stock assessments.

Objectives

1. To extend the general SEF operating model for evaluating harvest strategies and performance indicators to deal with fisheries subject to exploitation using multiple gear-types / fleets.
2. To develop a user interface for the software used to conduct stock assessments and evaluate harvest strategies in the SEF, and to improve the presentation for non-experts (non-quantitative biologists, managers and industry) who may wish to use the software.
3. To parameterise the general operating model using the actual data for redfish, pink ling, tiger flathead, and spotted warehou and hence select robust assessment methods and harvest strategies for these species.
4. To evaluate the costs and benefits associated with different data acquisition strategies for these species (with particular reference to fishery-independent survey techniques).
5. To develop the modeling software in a manner which lends itself to tailoring (by CSIRO and other agencies) to suit other Commonwealth or State fisheries.

Final report

The application of industry acoustic techniques to the surveying of NSW redfish stocks: a feasibility study

Project number: 1999-113
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $44,780.00
Principal Investigator: Jeremy D. Prince
Organisation: Biospherics Pty Ltd
Project start/end date: 28 Jun 1999 - 30 Dec 2001
Contact:
FRDC
SPECIES

Need

Considered a low priority species the SEF for many years the importance of redfish research has greatly increased over the last few years because of a contentious review of the existing stock assessment.

Over the last 20 years redfish catches have varied between 900 and 4000t. In 1997 the redfish catch, including estimated discards, was around 2000t. Standardised catch rates of commercial trawlers reported in SEF1 returns have varied without trend between 115 - 240kg/h since 1986.

In 1993 the redfish stock was estimated by SEFAG on the basis of commercial catch rate trends and the changing size structure of the catch to be around 10 - 20,000t.

A Redfish Assessment Group (RAG) was established in 1998 to refine and update the redfish assessment. The RAG reviewed for the 1998 SEFAG plenary a highly contentious preliminary assessment which estimated that the redfish biomass was only 3-4,000t, and likely to decline rapidly even without further fishing. The RAG's cohort analysis also suggested that over the last five years recruitment rates have first spiked up to several times historic levels, but have then declined to virtually nothing in the last two years of the analysis.

These estimates are extremely contentious with industry in NSW who fiercely dispute them. On the basis of the size of acoustic marks they see, and the size of their own shots, they believe the biomass to be considerably higher. Fishers claim that catch rate trends reflect changing fishing patterns. That quota management has lead to them optimising the species composition of catches which has lead to decreased targeting of single species aggregations and a decline in catch rates (FRDC 97/114). They claim that changing catchability is producing a misleading stock assessment.

There was some support for this industry view amongst the scientific members of the 1998 SEFAG plenary. The plenary was also aware that cohort analyses are prone to producing unrealistic estimates in the final years of the modelled time series. SEFAG Plenary considered that the model provided unrealistic estimates of recruitment and stock biomass and decided that it could not endorse the preliminary assessment. Instead they have prescribed a series of diagnostic analyses which should be carried out on the cohort analysis during 1998/99 and placed a high prioirity on this research proposal. It is hoped that the diagnostic test, which include applying alternative assessment models to the same data, will indicate whether or not the RAG's preliminary assessment is reliable and so suggest an appropriate reaction to the new draft assessment for redfish.

However the essential problem remains that assessment will continue to be based upon questionable fishery dependent trends unless quantitative techniques are developed for surveying these stocks independently to evolving fishing practices.

The aim of this proposal is to demonstrate the feasibility of acoustically surveying an area of the SEF containing redfish aggregations during the winter of 1999.

It should be noted that the scope of this current proposal is only to prove the feasibility of the industry acoustic survey technique. It does not extend to conducting a full scale survey of redfish stocks in 1999. Should the feasibility of producing fishery independent indices of redfish abundance be demonstrated by this feasibility study it is anticipated that the proven techniques would be scaled up by future projects to provide full stock surveys for redfish, and then potentially for other amenable SEF species.

In the long term RAG and SEFAG need reliable indices of stock abundance if they are to provide meaningful assessments of the status of redfish stocks. This project aims to prove the feasibility of the industry acoustic technique for providing fishery independent estimates of trends in redfish biomass. Information flowing from this project should in the long term improve the quality of the stock assessment which is vital to ensuring effective TAC setting.

In the short term the project will also provide some subsidiary benefits that may help resolve the issues raised by the RAG's revised assessment of redfish stocks.

The project will involve Dr Jeremy Prince becoming involved in RAG meetings allowing this project to be co-ordinated with the RAG's research plan. In addition to conducting this project Dr Prince has agreed to develop an alternative synthesis assessment of redfish using an assessment framework developed by Prof. Ray Hilborn of the University of Washington. This will go some way to responding to SEFAG's call for conducting diagnostic tests during 1999 on the new cohort assessment.

In addition the data collected by this feasibility study may allow some minimum estimates of absolute redfish biomass (actual tonnage) to be made for the selected survey area (see methods). While it is acknowledged that absolute estimates of biomass will be highly imprecise because of the number of assumptions that will be required to produce the estimates; making uniformily conservative assumptions will allow some minimum level of biomass to be proved. Such minimum proven estimates may still prove useful to the RAG by allowing the stock assessment to be bounded by some scientifically proven extremes.

Finally if the industry acoustic techniques is shown to be feasible this pilot scale project should also have been able to document redfish aggregation dynamics during 1999 this will help build a documented basis upon which long term surveys can be designed.

Objectives

1. To conduct four acoustic surveys of redfish aggregations within a selected research area using EchoListener a commercial fishing vessel equipped with EchoListener equipment.
2. Repeatedly map the distribution and acoustic density of marks attributable to redfish and derive a range of biomass estimates based on these data.
3. Analyse and report on the feasibility of estimating redfish biomass using industry acoustics.

Final report

ISBN: 0-9585910-7-5
Author: Jeremy Prince
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