Project number: 1995-165
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $116,068.00
Principal Investigator: Harry Gorfine
Organisation: Agriculture Victoria
Project start/end date: 28 Jun 1996 - 29 Sep 1998
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To determine the extent of migration and re-aggregation of a blacklip abalone population in response to fishing
2. To describe differences between pre and post-fishing spatial distribution patterns in blacklip abalone population
3. To determine the growth rates of a "stunted" abalone sub-stock

Final report

ISBN: 0 7311 4207 1
Author: H.K. Gorfine R.A. Officer C.D. Dixon
Final Report • 1998-09-10 • 2.09 MB
1995-165-DLD.pdf

Summary

Typically abalone are found clustered into aggregations of many individuals along gutters and ledges that dissect the surfaces of the reefs they inhabit. Commercial abalone divers take advantage of this clustering behaviour and specifically target aggregations to minimise the time spent searching for abalone and maximise their catch rates. This approach to abalone harvesting would be expected to progressively reduce the number and size of the aggregations to produce a less clustered pattern of distribution. Most methods used to detect changes in abalone abundance that result from fishing assume that abalone movement will have minimal effect on post-fishing patterns of distribution.

Abalone are generally viewed as relatively inactive organisms that occupy specific homesites from which they seldom move. Evidence for this lack of movement includes the oval shaped 'scars' of bare rock, free of algae and other immobile invertebrates, that remain after abalone are harvested. However there are many anecdotes describing the tendency for abalone to reform aggregations after fishing and during spawning periods. Presumably the latter promotes fertilisation success by increasing the quantities of sperm and eggs that mix in the water. It is unclear why abalone may aggregate into clusters outside spawning periods. If re-aggregation does occur after fishing, it is also unclear where these 'replacement' abalone come from. There is some speculation that small abalone may emerge from crevices and cryptic habitat. Other hypotheses include small-scale movements within aggregations or migration from unfished areas. An understanding of how re-aggregation occurs after fishing and to what extent it occurs, is essential to determine its effect on estimates of abalone abundance and to estimate important population characteristics such as rates of natural mortality.

Keywords: Haliotis rubra, abalone, dispersal, movement, aggregation, natural mortality, tag-loss, tag-recapture, stunted, growth.

Related research

Communities
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2023-085
PROJECT STATUS:
CURRENT

Snapper Science Program: Theme 1 - Biology and Ecology

1. Quantify the abundance of age 0+ Snapper in northern Spencer Gulf and Gulf St Vincent to provide relative estimates of recruitment for 2024, 2025, and 2026. Examine the otoliths of these fish to improve the understanding of early life history processes.
ORGANISATION:
Flinders University
Adoption