3 results

SESSF Industry Development Subprogram: adding value to an under utilised fish species (silver warehou)

Project number: 2007-209
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $53,800.00
Principal Investigator: Malcolm McLaughlin
Organisation: McLaughlin Consolidated Fishermen Ltd
Project start/end date: 30 Jul 2007 - 30 May 2009
Contact:
FRDC

Need

There is little opportunity for fishers in the SESSF to increase profitability. All major species have been allocated quotas, and there is little scope to increasing quotas with all species fully exploited or overfished. While much research has focused on the collection of biological data, assessment of the status of fish stocks and the impact of fishing on the environment (Knuckey 2004) there is a need to investigate value adding to species currently captured by the fishery.

Silver warehou is one of the most promising low-value species to trial for value adding. At present there is little demand from the consumer public with its off white colour when filleted, large catches of it are landed during winter months depressing the price. Many hundreds of tonnes of this species is currently discarded at sea due to lack of markets.

The cost of establishing new markets for both the flathead and school whiting were considerable and borne solely by Consolfish, though all fishers benefited from the higher prices. The products were so successful that Consolfish can no longer afford to process small to medium flathead as the high price at the wharf makes it unviable.

Silver warehou is a relatively unfamilar fish to oversees processors. This project is needed to develop a consumer friendly product and then organise the processing techniques, further training and production planning. The Thai processors have indicated they are keen to process the fish and the Woolworth supermarket chain have indicated they will be willing to stock it on a trial basis. Promotion of the product will be required and will be undertaken at Consolfish expense.

Objectives

1. Conduct research to confirm appropriate markets for this seafood product
2. Develop a new seafood product from silver warehou that will appeal to the consumer and is competitively priced to similar imported products
3. Adapt equipment to process silver warehou into suitable products
4. Establish training program for processing staff to ensure product QA
5. Desribe how the process applied to silver warehou can be adapted to other low-value species

Final report

ISBN: 978-0-9808289-0-0 General
Author: Malcolm McLaughlin

Stock structure and spatial dynamics of the warehous: a pilot study

Project number: 2001-004
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $110,450.00
Principal Investigator: Sonia G. Talman
Organisation: Agriculture Victoria
Project start/end date: 13 Jul 2001 - 30 Nov 2003
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Blue and spotted warehou are important species in the South East Fishery. The 2000 actual TACs for blue and spotted warehou were 1907 and 4829 tonnes, respectively. The species, however, exhibit conflicting trends. The blue warehou TAC has been reduced in recent years while that for spotted has been increased. The total blue warehou catch in 1999 was the lowest since 1986 and recent assessments indicate that the "stock" is in decline. The 2001 TAC for blue warehou has been halved to 750 t. For spotted warehou, it was concluded, at a recent stock assessment workshop, that while recruitment is variable trends in standardised CPUE indicate a relatively stable resource.

There have been no studies on the stock structure of these species in Australian waters and for management purposes both species are considered one stock. In this application, the term stock is used to refer to a management unit, that is fishing one unit does not effect another. This may or may not have a genetic significance.

Both species exhibit complex spatial variability, particularly east and west of Bass Strait. The importance of this to assessment is increasingly been realised. The most recent assessment of blue warehou is considerably more uncertain because model fits to the data are very poor, assuming a single population across the fishery, and consequently areas east and west of Bass Strait were modelled separately. However, fits of models themselves are not an adequate base for determining stock structure and there are a number of hypotheses (eg. separate east and west stocks; one stock but the recruitment rates to the east and west differ among years; migrations between east and west) that appear to be consistent with the existing information. Similarly future assessments of spotted warehou will be limited without this information. Clearly, the lack of information on stock structure and spatial dynamics will adversely effect the efficacy and acceptance of stock assessments of both species.

This proposal aims to address this issue by assessing a suite of tools to determine which can provide the most information on stock structure; genetics, morphometrics, otolith morphology and otolith microchemistry. The latter may also provide valuable insights in migratory dynamics. All these techniques can be expensive and sometimes provide ambiguous results. Consequently, the proposal is to undertake a pilot study assessing these approaches to ascertain the most useful method prior to any full study being undertaken. However, although it is a pilot study, it is hoped that the preliminary results will assist BWAG weight the hypotheses used in the modelling and hence reduce uncertainty in the assessment.

Objectives

1. To determine a suitable approach for assessing stock structure in blue and spotted warehou.
2. To evaluate the use of otolith microchemistry as a means of examining migration in blue and spotted warehou.

Final report

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