Lecture 29- Australian Fisheries Flashcards
How have fisheries increase in the last 40 years?
-4x in the last 40 years
How do Australian fisheries compare to other countries?
-small
-the Australian fishing zone is one of the world’s largest in the world
-includes: Antarctica, Macquire and Heard Islands, Christmas and Cocos Keeling Islands, Lord Howe and Norfolk Islands
-Huge fishing zone: 3rd largest in the world Low productivity – no major upwelling zones • ranks 60th in world in commercial catch
• 0.2% of world’s total catch
High diversity (many different species) and high value
• 2% of world value
• Major fisheries: Prawn, Rock Lobster, Tuna, Salmon,
Abalone
-Fisheries are 5th most valuable food industry in Australia
What is the Australian Fisheries Management Authority?
• “Responsible for the efficient and sustainable management of Commonwealth fish resources on behalf of the Australian community.”
• Ranked no. 2 in the world for sustainability
• Ways fisheries are managed:
• effort controls (gear type restrictions, seasonal closures) • output controls (quotas, size limits, bag limits)
• habitat protection zones (marine parks, nursery grounds,
vulnerable populations)
• Australian fish stocks are generally in good shape and improving.
• Managed for sustainability - Catch levels are generally set to keep target species population levels steady…
• …and to minimise broader impacts on marine ecosystem.
• When troubles with a fishery are detected, catch limits
and other management strategies are set in place.
• Major issue is lack of adequate knowledge on some fisheries
Has the aquaculture grown in the last past years?
- yes
- substantially
- it is rising year by year in Australia
What are the top 5 species groups (in terms of production value) in aquaculture?
- salmonids
- tuna
- pearl oysters
- edible oysters
- prawns
What are some other species that are aquacultured?
- finfish (barramundi, snapper, kingfish, Murray cod) • abalone
- mussels
- mud crabs
- sea cucumbers
What are the benefits and drawbacks of Australian aquaculture fisheries?
1.Benefits:
• Potential to reduce pressure on natural populations • Potentially no by-catch or fishing impacts
• Can produce based on demand
• Quality control
2.Drawbacks:
• Artificial concentration of single species • Removal from the wild
• Input vs output
• Infrastructure
What are some questions to ask before you buy/eat?
- Is the species slow growing or long lived (over 20yrs old)?
If a species is long lived or slow growing, it is likely to be vulnerable to overfishing (slow to reproduce). - Is it a deep sea species? (found below 500m)
Deep sea species - life characteristics which make them particularly vulnerable to overfishing (ie: slow growing, long lived, late to reach sexual maturity). - Is it a shark or ray?
Sharks and rays - biologically more like whales and dolphins than fish. They are slow growing, long lived and produce very few young. These characteristics make them particularly vulnerable to overfishing.
What is the Southern Bluefin Tuna Fishery?
-large fishery
What is the Southern Bluefin Tuna life cycle?
• Gather and spawn off North West shelf
• Larvae drik south in Leeuwin current
• Feed on zooplankton and grow rapidly
• Reach Great Australian Bight as juveniles
• Schools of juveniles caught in purse seines by SA fishermen
• Adult fish roam the southern and south Pacific oceans
• Feed where concentraAons of fish occur
• Oken at edges of warm eddies off NSW
• Long line fishing is main fishing method used by most fishers,
except Australian fishers
What is the Tuna mariculture?
• Catch schools of juveniles off South Australia & Western Australia
• Enclose schools in nets, tow to port
• Transfer the juveniles to big sea-pens -
‘sea cage’
• Feed them imported frozen anchovies -
famen for 3 -4 months
• Harvest when large, in perfect condition
• Good condition……
= most expensive meat in the world
Is the Southern Bluefin Fishery sustainable?
• IUCN red list: critically endangered
• Classed as overfished by the Bureau of Rural Sciences
• Spawning population severely depleted
• Tuna mariculture removes juveniles before they breed
• Current catches limit probability of population rebuilding
• Takes 2 – 12 kg of wild fish (fed to tuna) to produce 1kg of sea cage tuna
=SAY NO!
What is the rock lobster fishery like?
• Two major species:
• Western rock lobster (Panulirus cygnus)
• Southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii)
-WA fishery most valuable
• Long lived – up to 20yrs
• Have very long larval stage (phyllosoma)
• 9 – 11 months
• drik around Indian Ocean gyre
• then becomes puerulus (juvenile)
• swims back towards WA, semles on rocky reefs
• Caught in lobster pots – low impact fishing method
Which lobster is better to buy?
-Western Rock Lobster is better than Southern Rock Lobster
What is Australia’s second most valuable fishery?
-the prawn fisheries