27,141 results
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1995-162
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Prawn farm effluent: origin, composition and treatment

Prawn farming is an expanding, high-value primary industry in coastal areas of Australia. Currently there are approximately 500 ha of farm ponds. The majority of prawn farms are in Queensland, but there are also farms in NSW, NT and WA with plans for expansion of the industry in all these states....
ORGANISATION:
Cooperative Research Centre for Aquaculture
SPECIES
Adoption
Communities
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-098
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Southern Bluefin Tuna: Changing The Trajectory

Life on the Line is the true story of the Southern Bluefin Tuna, its biological traits and its history of exploitation and most recently its recovery. This documentary covers how research, managers and the fishing industry - commercial and recreational have contributed to the recovering status of...
ORGANISATION:
Australian Fisheries Management Authority (AFMA)
Communities
PROJECT NUMBER • 2016-128
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Human Dimensions Research Subprogram management

A National RD&E Workshop was held on 21 September 2018 in Adelaide, South Australia, in which representatives of industry, research, management, and service providers addressed how to make a positive difference to the mental health of people in fisheries and aquaculture. The impetus for the...
ORGANISATION:
University of Tasmania

Mapping the aquaculture engagement and aquaculture literacy landscape

Project number: 2022-051
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $61,600.00
Principal Investigator: Julie Petty
Organisation: Seafood Industry Australia (SIA)
Project start/end date: 18 Sep 2022 - 14 Mar 2023
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Aquaculture is ultimately a complex concept. Presently the aquaculture industry sectors are experiencing challenges to communicating a collective narrative to support and educate external stakeholders and defend its activities when required. This position is due to a range of factors, including the absence of coordinated government outreach programs, policies and platforms (like provided to dairy and other sectors), a lack of stakeholder awareness on industry priorities and contribution to society, and the absence of effective structures to support knowledge sharing and low aquaculture literacy. Furthermore, there has been no platform to bring the industry sectors together for united outreach or to collectively communicate the value proposition of aquaculture and the key messages in a way that resonates, or results in a change of behaviour (trust) with key stakeholders.

While there are many individual voices in the industry with a multitude of state and species-based advocacy organizations, committees and special interest groups, this makes it difficult to lead a coordinated and consistent internal message within the industry, as well as to coordinate responses to issues and topics important to external stakeholders. The impact can mean there are mixed or incoherent messages going to seafood consumers, local community groups living or operating adjacent to farms, supply chain partners, NGO’s, researchers, policy makers, international agencies, and local, state and federal government agencies.

To build a strong and ensuring cross-sectoral communications and outreach program, there is a need to map the internal and external stakeholder landscape and capture current outreach and communications efforts, priorities, message banks, and scale of influence of these groups.

Objectives

1. Relevant aquaculture stakeholders are identified and have been mapped and cross reference by motivators, state, sector. Knowledge gaps and opportunities documented using online surveys, desktop research and stakeholder interviews.
2. Communication and outreach strawman developed identifying preferred communication platforms and formats, prioritised hot topics.
3. Opportunities to streamline engagement processes and reduce duplication are identified
4. Core success criteria and gaps to be addressed are identified and prioritized along with reasonable, realistic mitigation tactics.

Final report

Authors: Jenny Margetts Julie Petty Angela Williamson & Stephanie Mackillop
Final Report • 2023-10-09 • 1.32 MB
2022-051-DLD.pdf

Summary

Aquaculture is one of the fastest growing agrifood areas globally and is key to ensure food security for a growing world population. Australia’s aquaculture industry has a critical role to play in realising this ambition, having surpassed wild catch levels and expected to reached A$2.29B GVP (2022-23). The industry is also poised to expand, drawing on innovation, a highly skilled workforce, research and growing consumer demand. It is also increasingly responsive to global trends, like investor and retailer sustainability expectations, decarbonisation roadmaps, zero harm welfare frameworks, and the increased community and interest group scrutiny on local impact of food systems.

 

However, communicating the potential of the industry and its products is often challenging, as key stakeholder groups sometimes have limited understanding of Australian aquaculture operations, the industry’s direction, and its benefits. This is compounded by the diversity of the industry and its stakeholders and regulators, and the absence of effective structures to educate and support knowledge sharing. Hence, understanding the current stakeholder and engagement landscape of the Australian aquaculture industry is seen as an essential step in developing effective industry outreach and communication initiatives to build aquaculture literacy across the stakeholder spectrum.

 

This project was undertaken by Seafood Industry Australia (SIA) with the support of the P2P Business Solutions, an independent consultancy, and the Blue Economy Cooperative Research Centre (CRC). The project was also supported by a Project Review Group comprised of representatives from across the industry.

 

As a starting point, desktop research was undertaken to map the current stakeholder and engagement landscape of the Australian aquaculture industry. This provided insight into how organisations in different sectors of the industry from across Australia currently communicate with their stakeholders, who their key stakeholders are, and the main topics being communicated. Initiatives of other international aquaculture sectors and Australian primary industries were also investigated to understand the approaches they have adopted for their industry outreach, communication and engagement programs.

 
Consultation was then undertaken with industry through an online survey, interviews, and mini-roundtables. The aim of the online survey was to collect insights from a broad range of industry stakeholders, whilst the interviews and mini-round tables were more targeted and provided the opportunity to explore industry needs, priorities, issues, challenges, and opportunities in relation to outreach, communication and engagement in more detail. With this information the Australian aquaculture industry is now equipped to build a robust, enduring, and targeted Australian Aquaculture Literacy Initiative (AALI) focused on outreach and communication for the collective industry, which will build aquaculture literacy across all stakeholder groups. The project commenced in October 2022 and was completed in June 2023.
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2021-081
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

An investigation of recreational fishing peak bodies in Western Australia, Victoria and Northern Territory to identify insights into models of success

In 2021, the Tasmanian Association for Recreational Fishing (TARFish) identified the need to improve its capacity and capability to better meet the needs of recreational fishers in Tasmania. To support organisational renewal, TARFish sought to understand the traits and/or conditions that contribute...
ORGANISATION:
Tasmanian Association for Recreational Fishing Inc (TARFish)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2016-262
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

RAC QLD: Queensland Seafood Marketing Symposium

The initial proposal to hold a marketing symposium in Queensland was based on the need to bring Industry together with particular reference to the post-harvest sector to provide, exchange and discuss information in an open forum regarding trends and/or needs in the existing value chain process which...
ORGANISATION:
Queensland Seafood Marketers Association Inc (QSMA)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 1998-221
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Impoundment stocking strategies for eastern and northern Australia

Fish stocking is a valuable and widely used fisheries management tool. If managed well, a fish stocking program can improve the status of declining or threatened fish stocks, restore species diversity to a degraded waterway, and even create a fishery where there was none before. The positive image...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries (QLD)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2013-205
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Beyond engagement: moving towards a co-management model for recreational fishing in South Australia

Fisheries management principally aims to maximise the community’s use of fisheries resource, which relies upon effective management decisions to ensure sustainability. Co-management arrangements have been utilised in fisheries management for some time as a framework to enable input of...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regions South Australia (PIRSA)
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 2004-201
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Innovative Solutions For Aquaculture: planning and management - addressing seal interactions in the finfish aquaculture industry

The broad aims of this study were to provide information on the foraging zones of seals, and the location of breeding colonies and haulout locations in the Eyre Peninsula region of South Australia, to assist in the zoning, appropriate placement and management of future finfish aquaculture...
ORGANISATION:
SARDI Food Safety and Innovation
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