Impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - Final report and data

Objectives of the project: 1. To develop deep-sea camera technologies that can be easily deployed during fishing operations, to facilitate widespread observations of demersal fishing activities (trawl, longline and trap) and their interactions with benthic environments. 2. To assess the vulnerabilit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: WELSFORD, DIRK (hasPrincipalInvestigator), WELSFORD, DIRK (processor), CONSTABLE, ANDREW (hasPrincipalInvestigator), CONSTABLE, ANDREW (processor), EWING, GRAEME (processor), HIBBERD, TY (processor), KILPATRICK, ROBBIE (processor), Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Australian Antarctic Data Centre
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchdata.ands.org.au/impacts-trawling-benthic-final-report/699563
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1189_Report
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699563
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic biota
environment
oceans
FISH
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES
EARTH SCIENCE &gt
BIOSPHERE &gt
ECOSYSTEMS &gt
MARINE ECOSYSTEMS &gt
BENTHIC
CONSERVATION
HUMAN DIMENSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
FISHERIES
AQUATIC SCIENCES
Demersal fishing
FRDC
Benthic Habitat
Bottom fishing
Benthic invertebrates
Impact assessment
Risk assessment
HIMI
Heard Island and McDonald Islands
DEMERSAL TRAWL
Cameras
SHIPS
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
spellingShingle biota
environment
oceans
FISH
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES
EARTH SCIENCE &gt
BIOSPHERE &gt
ECOSYSTEMS &gt
MARINE ECOSYSTEMS &gt
BENTHIC
CONSERVATION
HUMAN DIMENSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
FISHERIES
AQUATIC SCIENCES
Demersal fishing
FRDC
Benthic Habitat
Bottom fishing
Benthic invertebrates
Impact assessment
Risk assessment
HIMI
Heard Island and McDonald Islands
DEMERSAL TRAWL
Cameras
SHIPS
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
Impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - Final report and data
topic_facet biota
environment
oceans
FISH
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES
EARTH SCIENCE &gt
BIOSPHERE &gt
ECOSYSTEMS &gt
MARINE ECOSYSTEMS &gt
BENTHIC
CONSERVATION
HUMAN DIMENSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
FISHERIES
AQUATIC SCIENCES
Demersal fishing
FRDC
Benthic Habitat
Bottom fishing
Benthic invertebrates
Impact assessment
Risk assessment
HIMI
Heard Island and McDonald Islands
DEMERSAL TRAWL
Cameras
SHIPS
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
description Objectives of the project: 1. To develop deep-sea camera technologies that can be easily deployed during fishing operations, to facilitate widespread observations of demersal fishing activities (trawl, longline and trap) and their interactions with benthic environments. 2. To assess the vulnerability of benthic communities in Subantarctic (Australian AFZ) and high latitude areas of the Southern Ocean (Australian EEZ) to demersal fishing using trawls, longlines or traps, using video and still camera technologies. 3. To assess the risk of demersal fishing to long-term sustainability of benthic communities in these areas, based on the assessment of vulnerability and information from the literature on potential recovery of benthic species and habitats. 4. To recommend mitigation strategies by avoidance or gear modification, where identified to be needed, and practical guidelines to minimise fishing impacts on benthic communities. Non-Technical Summary Australia's domestic legislation and obligations under international agreements such as the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine living Resources (CCAMLR) requires that Australia's fishing activities in the Subantarctic and Antarctic Southern Ocean avoids unsustainable impacts to the ecosystem and biodiversity. As Australia uses bottom fishing methods, including demersal trawls and longlines to target Patagonian toothfish and mackerel icefish in this region there is the potential to impact upon benthic habitats. However, understanding the scale of disturbance caused by Australia's bottom fishing activities in the deep Southern Ocean is hampered by a paucity of data, theory and procedures. This project set out to address these issues by developing tools to allow such an assessment, with a focus on the fishery that has operating since 1997 targeting Patagonian toothfish and mackerel icefish in the EEZ around Heard Island and the McDonald Islands (HIMI). A significant output of this project was the development of a versatile camera system which was successfully deployed on trawls and longlines during commercial and research fishing activities in the EEZ at HIMI, BANZARE Bank and East Antarctica. It revealed for the first time the in situ nature and extent of demersal longline interactions in the deep ocean, as well as revealing the types of habitats and organisms on the seafloor where fishing takes place. This information, combined with comprehensive effort data from the fishery and scientific sampling of the types and abundance of organisms living on the seafloor across a range of depths and seafloor features, enabled the development of an assessment model to estimate the amount of disturbance caused by the fishery. This assessment indicates that the great majority of vulnerable organisms live on the seafloor in depths less than 1200 m. This range overlaps with the depths targeted by the trawl fishery, and to a lesser extent by the longline fishery. However due to the fact that the majority of trawling has focussed on a few relatively small fishing grounds, less than 1.5% of all the biomass in waters less than 1200 m are estimated to have been damaged or destroyed. Furthermore, the HIMI Marine Reserve, established in 2003, is estimated to contain over 40% of the biomass of the groups of benthic organisms considered as most vulnerable to bottom fishing at HIMI. Overall, an estimated 0.7% of the seafloor area within the EEZ at HIMI has had some level of interaction with bottom fishing gear between 1997 and 2013. The results of this project provide a process for assessing the levels of disturbance by bottom fishing which complements the existing processes that have been developed recently to conduct the Ecological Risk Assessment for the Effects of Fishing (ERA-EF) in other Commonwealth fisheries, as well as measures being developed by CCAMLR to avoid significant adverse impacts to vulnerable marine ecosystems. Data These data are commercial in confidence and therefore embargoed. They are located at aad\files\ERM and access is controlled due to the commercial in confidence nature of the raw data. There are approximately 1 TB of data and metadata including videos (.avi and .mov formats), spreadsheets (.xls), databases (.mdb), R scripts and data files (.r and .rdata) and documents (.txt. and .doc). They are organised into folders which broadly map onto the chapters in the final report, with subfolders for data, analyses and text development.
author2 WELSFORD, DIRK (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
WELSFORD, DIRK (processor)
CONSTABLE, ANDREW (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
CONSTABLE, ANDREW (processor)
EWING, GRAEME (processor)
HIBBERD, TY (processor)
KILPATRICK, ROBBIE (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title Impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - Final report and data
title_short Impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - Final report and data
title_full Impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - Final report and data
title_fullStr Impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - Final report and data
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - Final report and data
title_sort impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - final report and data
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.ands.org.au/impacts-trawling-benthic-final-report/699563
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1189_Report
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-42.0; southlimit=-70.0; westlimit=60.0; eastLimit=160.0; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 1999-07-01 to 2012-06-30
long_lat ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117)
ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117)
ENVELOPE(72.600,72.600,-53.033,-53.033)
ENVELOPE(77.733,77.733,-58.833,-58.833)
ENVELOPE(60.0,160.0,-42.0,-70.0)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
East Antarctica
Heard Island
Heard Island
Heard
McDonald Islands
Banzare Bank
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
East Antarctica
Heard Island
Heard Island
Heard
McDonald Islands
Banzare Bank
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Heard Island
Icefish
McDonald Islands
Patagonian Toothfish
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Heard Island
Icefish
McDonald Islands
Patagonian Toothfish
Southern Ocean
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.ands.org.au/impacts-trawling-benthic-final-report/699563
c96de5ac-fb22-4131-9f87-db5a74c7be07
ASAC_1189_Report
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1189_Report
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
_version_ 1766245831123402752
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699563 2023-05-15T13:46:57+02:00 Impacts of trawling on benthic habitats in the subantarctic and high antarctic - Final report and data WELSFORD, DIRK (hasPrincipalInvestigator) WELSFORD, DIRK (processor) CONSTABLE, ANDREW (hasPrincipalInvestigator) CONSTABLE, ANDREW (processor) EWING, GRAEME (processor) HIBBERD, TY (processor) KILPATRICK, ROBBIE (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-42.0; southlimit=-70.0; westlimit=60.0; eastLimit=160.0; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 1999-07-01 to 2012-06-30 https://researchdata.ands.org.au/impacts-trawling-benthic-final-report/699563 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1189_Report http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.ands.org.au/impacts-trawling-benthic-final-report/699563 c96de5ac-fb22-4131-9f87-db5a74c7be07 ASAC_1189_Report https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1189_Report http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre biota environment oceans FISH EARTH SCIENCE BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES EARTH SCIENCE &gt BIOSPHERE &gt ECOSYSTEMS &gt MARINE ECOSYSTEMS &gt BENTHIC CONSERVATION HUMAN DIMENSIONS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS FISHERIES AQUATIC SCIENCES Demersal fishing FRDC Benthic Habitat Bottom fishing Benthic invertebrates Impact assessment Risk assessment HIMI Heard Island and McDonald Islands DEMERSAL TRAWL Cameras SHIPS CONTINENT &gt ANTARCTICA GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS dataset ftands 2020-01-05T21:16:27Z Objectives of the project: 1. To develop deep-sea camera technologies that can be easily deployed during fishing operations, to facilitate widespread observations of demersal fishing activities (trawl, longline and trap) and their interactions with benthic environments. 2. To assess the vulnerability of benthic communities in Subantarctic (Australian AFZ) and high latitude areas of the Southern Ocean (Australian EEZ) to demersal fishing using trawls, longlines or traps, using video and still camera technologies. 3. To assess the risk of demersal fishing to long-term sustainability of benthic communities in these areas, based on the assessment of vulnerability and information from the literature on potential recovery of benthic species and habitats. 4. To recommend mitigation strategies by avoidance or gear modification, where identified to be needed, and practical guidelines to minimise fishing impacts on benthic communities. Non-Technical Summary Australia's domestic legislation and obligations under international agreements such as the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine living Resources (CCAMLR) requires that Australia's fishing activities in the Subantarctic and Antarctic Southern Ocean avoids unsustainable impacts to the ecosystem and biodiversity. As Australia uses bottom fishing methods, including demersal trawls and longlines to target Patagonian toothfish and mackerel icefish in this region there is the potential to impact upon benthic habitats. However, understanding the scale of disturbance caused by Australia's bottom fishing activities in the deep Southern Ocean is hampered by a paucity of data, theory and procedures. This project set out to address these issues by developing tools to allow such an assessment, with a focus on the fishery that has operating since 1997 targeting Patagonian toothfish and mackerel icefish in the EEZ around Heard Island and the McDonald Islands (HIMI). A significant output of this project was the development of a versatile camera system which was successfully deployed on trawls and longlines during commercial and research fishing activities in the EEZ at HIMI, BANZARE Bank and East Antarctica. It revealed for the first time the in situ nature and extent of demersal longline interactions in the deep ocean, as well as revealing the types of habitats and organisms on the seafloor where fishing takes place. This information, combined with comprehensive effort data from the fishery and scientific sampling of the types and abundance of organisms living on the seafloor across a range of depths and seafloor features, enabled the development of an assessment model to estimate the amount of disturbance caused by the fishery. This assessment indicates that the great majority of vulnerable organisms live on the seafloor in depths less than 1200 m. This range overlaps with the depths targeted by the trawl fishery, and to a lesser extent by the longline fishery. However due to the fact that the majority of trawling has focussed on a few relatively small fishing grounds, less than 1.5% of all the biomass in waters less than 1200 m are estimated to have been damaged or destroyed. Furthermore, the HIMI Marine Reserve, established in 2003, is estimated to contain over 40% of the biomass of the groups of benthic organisms considered as most vulnerable to bottom fishing at HIMI. Overall, an estimated 0.7% of the seafloor area within the EEZ at HIMI has had some level of interaction with bottom fishing gear between 1997 and 2013. The results of this project provide a process for assessing the levels of disturbance by bottom fishing which complements the existing processes that have been developed recently to conduct the Ecological Risk Assessment for the Effects of Fishing (ERA-EF) in other Commonwealth fisheries, as well as measures being developed by CCAMLR to avoid significant adverse impacts to vulnerable marine ecosystems. Data These data are commercial in confidence and therefore embargoed. They are located at aad\files\ERM and access is controlled due to the commercial in confidence nature of the raw data. There are approximately 1 TB of data and metadata including videos (.avi and .mov formats), spreadsheets (.xls), databases (.mdb), R scripts and data files (.r and .rdata) and documents (.txt. and .doc). They are organised into folders which broadly map onto the chapters in the final report, with subfolders for data, analyses and text development. Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica East Antarctica Heard Island Icefish McDonald Islands Patagonian Toothfish Southern Ocean Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Southern Ocean East Antarctica Heard Island Heard Island ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117) Heard ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117) McDonald Islands ENVELOPE(72.600,72.600,-53.033,-53.033) Banzare Bank ENVELOPE(77.733,77.733,-58.833,-58.833) ENVELOPE(60.0,160.0,-42.0,-70.0)