Undertaking an audit and assessment of past Australian aquaculture research, development and extension for all species, to determine what factors led to successful or not successful development of the aquaculture species
Aquafin CRC: feed technology for temperate fish species
Developing techniques to estimate total allowable catches for the NPF major prawn species
Following the Ministerial Direction, the NPF is likely to adopt an ITQ management system with a time line of 2010. The transition to a quota system requires research on methods of estimating total allowable catches (TACs). The NPF is a multi-species fishery. However, stock assessment has only been done for two out of the eight commercial species. Controlling catch of only two species cannot secure the long-term sustainability of the whole NPF. Therefore, a whole-fishery approach must be adopted, and stock assessment needs to be extended to a greater number of species.
Estimating TACs for annual species like the NPF prawns is challenging because recruitment and subsequent catches are greatly influenced by environmental variables and fluctuate widely. In the NPF, biological parameters are not uniformly known for all prawn species, and the characteristics of population dynamics differ from species to species. A tier-approach should be applied here like the SESSF, i.e. a formal stock assessment will be done for species supported by sufficient data; for others more empirical methods may be adopted. It is well known that the move from input to output control causes major changes to the catch rate data and can cause a major break in the time series.
A key management objective in the NPF is the maximisation of economic profits. TACs will, therefore, have to reflect this economic objective. Although the theory of maximum economic yield (MEY) is well established, such a management target has not been implemented in any fishery. Achieving such a target requires both methodological development and analysis of a number of factors not previously considered when setting TACs in fisheries.
In summary, this proposal is designed to meet the strategic need and provide the science, tools and technical support for the successful transition of the NPF to a quota management system.
Final report
Assessment of inshore habitats around Tasmania for life history stages of commercial finfish species
Ballast water investigations
Final report
Ships' ballast water was sampled on 28 occasions in four ports between November, 1976, and October, 1978.
A 100.,u plankton net was hand hauled vertically 5 times in each tank. Eight non indigenous species were obtained: 6 copepods,
1 mysid and 1 amphipod. A further 14 species of copepod and 4 noncopepod taxa were found which have an Indopacific distribution. Twenty one copepods and twenty noncoepods could not be identified to species level which meant their zoogeographic affinities were undeterminable. The role of factors such as amount of water imported, _hull position, port of loading, voyage duration, mid ocean exchange, pumping survival and salinity and temperature shock was briefly examined.
Sediments in the bottom of ballast water tanks were examined on 9 occasions. Eight non indigenous species, 8 cosmopolitan species and twenty seven other taxa were found indicating a new potential vector for the dissemination of aquatic biota.
No evidence was obtained to indicate successful colonisation had taken place via either ballast water or ballast mud. However, because the identification and distribution of indigenous fauna are so poorly known it is equally impossible to conclude that successful colonisation has not taken place. The need to protect local species from predators, competitors and parasites requires that a sterilization policy be adopted. Preliminary estimates of the amount of sodium hypochlorite (liquid) and calcium hypochlorite (solid) required to kill animals in ballast tanks were made.