Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies

Commercial scallop ( Pecten fumatus ) fisheries were overfished in southeast Australia from their inception in the 1920s right up until the late 1980s, when there were no productive scallop grounds left in the region. Because of this historical overfishing, current management of the harvest faces th...

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Main Authors: Semmens, JM, Mendo, T, Jones, N, Keane, JP, Leon, R, Ewing, G, Hartmann, K
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Fisheries Research and Development Corporation 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ecite.utas.edu.au/132316
id ftunivtasecite:oai:ecite.utas.edu.au:132316
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection eCite UTAS (University of Tasmania)
op_collection_id ftunivtasecite
language English
topic Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Fisheries Sciences
Fisheries Management
spellingShingle Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Fisheries Sciences
Fisheries Management
Semmens, JM
Mendo, T
Jones, N
Keane, JP
Leon, R
Ewing, G
Hartmann, K
Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies
topic_facet Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Fisheries Sciences
Fisheries Management
description Commercial scallop ( Pecten fumatus ) fisheries were overfished in southeast Australia from their inception in the 1920s right up until the late 1980s, when there were no productive scallop grounds left in the region. Because of this historical overfishing, current management of the harvest faces the significant challenge of trying to rebuild the stock and recruitment. The present study, undertaken by University of Tasmanias Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, was developed to critically examine spatial harvest strategies employed in the southeast Australian commercial scallop fisheries, which aim to buffer against recruitment variation to increase both production and continuity between seasons. As part of the Commonwealth Bass Strait Central Zone Scallop Fishery (BSCZSF) harvest strategy and the Tasmanian Scallop Fishery (TSF) Management Plan, pre-season surveys determine areas to be opened/or closed during the upcoming season. Known areas with >20% discard rate are closed to fishing, regardless of scallop quality and potential for opening during the season. A detailed characterization of morphometric relationships across different locations would permit greater confidence in the use of the relationships that exist between various measurements used. Additionally, scallops in the areas opened can be unsuitable for harvest due to poor condition when the season opens. This means the areas are opened then rapidly closed to fishing again, causing disruption to fishing/processing businesses, and marketing problems. Delayed opening while scallops gain condition can also prevent the total catch being taken because there is a fixed, pre-determined finish date. The fixed finish dates have been established to protect settling scallop spat, which traditionally occurs between September and December following spawning between August and October. The problem with poor condition at the start of the season has arisen because scallops are increasingly reaching spawning condition between December and February, particularly in the BSCZSF. As well as potentially putting settling scallops at risk through impacts upon opening the fishery, this late development is also contributing to difficulty in providing well-conditioned scallops throughout the season. This study aimed to better define timing of scallop spawning based on gonad condition, and hence potential settlement of recruits across the different populations/beds of the fishery and determine any differences in spawning potential among scallop beds/locations. Additionally, this project aimed to define differences in spawning potential between scallops ranging from 80 to 90 mm shell length (SL) and assess the size limits used to define a bed as commercially viable across the three southeast Australian jurisdictions. Furthering our understanding of growth rate in several fishing locations across all three jurisdictions may also allow better management of individual beds and in addition to scallop condition will be used to inform current season openings and closings. An overall aim was to also provide information that will allow the jurisdictions greater capacity to work together to facilitate effective management for the fishery as a whole.
format Text
author Semmens, JM
Mendo, T
Jones, N
Keane, JP
Leon, R
Ewing, G
Hartmann, K
author_facet Semmens, JM
Mendo, T
Jones, N
Keane, JP
Leon, R
Ewing, G
Hartmann, K
author_sort Semmens, JM
title Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies
title_short Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies
title_full Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies
title_fullStr Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies
title_full_unstemmed Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies
title_sort determining when and where to fish: linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies
publisher Fisheries Research and Development Corporation
publishDate 2019
url http://ecite.utas.edu.au/132316
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
op_relation http://ecite.utas.edu.au/132316/1/132316 - Determining when and where to fish - Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies.pdf
Semmens, JM and Mendo, T and Jones, N and Keane, JP and Leon, R and Ewing, G and Hartmann, K, Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies, Fisheries Research and Development Corporation, Australia, 978-1-925646-59-7, March 2019, pp. 1-84. (2019) [Government or Industry Research]
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/132316
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spelling ftunivtasecite:oai:ecite.utas.edu.au:132316 2023-05-15T13:55:18+02:00 Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies Semmens, JM Mendo, T Jones, N Keane, JP Leon, R Ewing, G Hartmann, K 2019 application/pdf http://ecite.utas.edu.au/132316 en eng Fisheries Research and Development Corporation http://ecite.utas.edu.au/132316/1/132316 - Determining when and where to fish - Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies.pdf Semmens, JM and Mendo, T and Jones, N and Keane, JP and Leon, R and Ewing, G and Hartmann, K, Determining when and where to fish: Linking scallop spawning, settlement, size and condition to collaborative spatial harvest and industry in-season management strategies, Fisheries Research and Development Corporation, Australia, 978-1-925646-59-7, March 2019, pp. 1-84. (2019) [Government or Industry Research] http://ecite.utas.edu.au/132316 Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences Fisheries Sciences Fisheries Management Government or Industry Research NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftunivtasecite 2019-12-13T22:30:13Z Commercial scallop ( Pecten fumatus ) fisheries were overfished in southeast Australia from their inception in the 1920s right up until the late 1980s, when there were no productive scallop grounds left in the region. Because of this historical overfishing, current management of the harvest faces the significant challenge of trying to rebuild the stock and recruitment. The present study, undertaken by University of Tasmanias Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, was developed to critically examine spatial harvest strategies employed in the southeast Australian commercial scallop fisheries, which aim to buffer against recruitment variation to increase both production and continuity between seasons. As part of the Commonwealth Bass Strait Central Zone Scallop Fishery (BSCZSF) harvest strategy and the Tasmanian Scallop Fishery (TSF) Management Plan, pre-season surveys determine areas to be opened/or closed during the upcoming season. Known areas with >20% discard rate are closed to fishing, regardless of scallop quality and potential for opening during the season. A detailed characterization of morphometric relationships across different locations would permit greater confidence in the use of the relationships that exist between various measurements used. Additionally, scallops in the areas opened can be unsuitable for harvest due to poor condition when the season opens. This means the areas are opened then rapidly closed to fishing again, causing disruption to fishing/processing businesses, and marketing problems. Delayed opening while scallops gain condition can also prevent the total catch being taken because there is a fixed, pre-determined finish date. The fixed finish dates have been established to protect settling scallop spat, which traditionally occurs between September and December following spawning between August and October. The problem with poor condition at the start of the season has arisen because scallops are increasingly reaching spawning condition between December and February, particularly in the BSCZSF. As well as potentially putting settling scallops at risk through impacts upon opening the fishery, this late development is also contributing to difficulty in providing well-conditioned scallops throughout the season. This study aimed to better define timing of scallop spawning based on gonad condition, and hence potential settlement of recruits across the different populations/beds of the fishery and determine any differences in spawning potential among scallop beds/locations. Additionally, this project aimed to define differences in spawning potential between scallops ranging from 80 to 90 mm shell length (SL) and assess the size limits used to define a bed as commercially viable across the three southeast Australian jurisdictions. Furthering our understanding of growth rate in several fishing locations across all three jurisdictions may also allow better management of individual beds and in addition to scallop condition will be used to inform current season openings and closings. An overall aim was to also provide information that will allow the jurisdictions greater capacity to work together to facilitate effective management for the fishery as a whole. Text Antarc* Antarctic Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies eCite UTAS (University of Tasmania) Antarctic