6,432 results
Environment
PROJECT NUMBER • 1999-215
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Links between seagrass habitats, piscivorous fishes and their fish prey

This project has increased our understanding of the importance of seagrass habitats to larger, commercially valuable, species of fish by combining experimental and correlative scientific principles. We found that many small fish use seagrass habitats for nutrition and to avoid predation by large...
ORGANISATION:
University of Melbourne

Effects of seasonal and interannual variability of the ocean environment on recruitment to the fisheries of Western Australia

Project number: 1994-032
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $233,603.00
Principal Investigator: Alan Pearce
Organisation: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart
Project start/end date: 20 Jul 1994 - 21 Sep 1999
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Establish a monthly climatology of sea-surface temperatures around WA from 1982 to 1997 using NOAA-AVHRR satellite data
2. Develop appropriate monthly indicies of ocean variability and create a historical database of oceanic variables at selected sites, including coastal sea-level, seasurface temperature, salinity and wind
3. Study relationships between oceanic processes and seasonal/interannual fluctuations in recruitment to the rock lobster, scallop, Australian salmon, pilchard and shark fisheries of WA

Final report

ISBN: 0 7309 8421 4
Author: A.F. Pearce N. Caputi K. Suber
Final Report • 1999-03-22 • 4.55 MB
1994-032-DLD.pdf

Summary

The relatively high catch of invertebrate species in Western Australia compared to finfish is in sharp contrast to other regions of the world where finfish production usually dominates. This low level of finfish production is primarily due to the Leeuwin Current which brings warm, low nutrient waters southward along the edge of the continental shelf of the Western Australian coast. By contrast, the other eastern boundary currents in the Southern Hemisphere (the Humboldt and Benguela Currents off the west coasts of South America and southern Africa respectively) are associated with upwelling of cool, nutrient-rich waters flowing northward, resulting in high rates of primary production and a correspondingly large finfish production.

There is an increasing awareness of the importance of oceanic processes such as advection, water temperature, etc. for recruitment to both pelagic and benthic fisheries. Previous studies off Western Australia have demonstrated that the Leeuwin Current and winds both play a key role in the settlement of rock lobster pueruli, with important consequences for the fishery 3 to 4 years later, and there are also indications of environmental influences on many other commercial fisheries.

his project has compiled the first comprehensive set of environmental data off Western Australia to enable these relationships to be further examined: satellite-derived sea-surface temperatures (SST), local in situ temperatures and salinities, coastal sea levels, the Southern Oscillation Index, and winds. In the absence of direct current measurements, monthly and annual coastal sea levels are used as an approximate "index" of the strength of the Leeuwin Current. SST gradients from both global-scale (the Reynolds dataset) and locally-received satellite data have also been derived as potential complementary indices of the thermal structure of Western Australian waters, but difficulties with adequate cloud-clearing have hampered work with the local data.

Adoption
PROJECT NUMBER • 2002-640
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Aquatic Animal health Subprogram: production of AQUAVETPLAN disease strategy manual for viral haemorrhagic septicaemia

In the May 2000 Budget, the Federal Government announced its Building a National Approach to Animal and Plant Health program. This initiative seeks to maintain Australia’s status as a sought after supplier of high quality, ‘clean, green’ agricultural produce. Within this...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF)
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-206
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Assessment of the Inflamark method as a sensitive and cost-effective measure of oxidative stress in cultured fish

This collaborative project between industry and academia was developed in response to the need for a reliable and simple measurement of fish health status in farmed populations as well as in a research context, to assess the outcomes of trials on health, nutrition and environment. We have developed...
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) WA
Adoption
PROJECT NUMBER • 2002-651
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Aquatic Animal Health Subprogram: whirling disease a disease strategy manual

Whirling disease is the disease of freshwater salmonid fish caused by the myxozoan parasite Myxobolus cerebralis. The parasite has never been detected in Australia, but is present in New Zealand and areas of North America, Europe, Africa and Asia. Whirling disease is a reportable disease in...
ORGANISATION:
Paul Hardy-Smith

Biology and harvest of tropical fishes in Queensland's Gulf of Carpentaria gillnet fisheries

Project number: 1992-145
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $140,880.36
Principal Investigator: Rod Garrett
Organisation: Department of Agriculture and Fisheries EcoScience Precinct
Project start/end date: 2 May 1993 - 27 May 1998
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. To undertake over a two year period an investigation of age, sexuality, reproduction, stock structure, and seasonal abundance of key target species threadfin salmon (Polydactylus sheridani), grunter (Pomadasys kaakan) and jewfish (Johnnius diacanthus) from the Queensland inshore gillnet fishery in eastern Gulf of Carpentaria waters.
2. To determine and compare within this time frame the geographic differences in life cycle details for the species on the major fishing grounds along the Queensland Gulf coast.
3. To develop a protocol for the long term monitoring of catches and fishing effort for these species on the eastern Gulf coast fishing grounds.
4. To make this information available for consideration in the review of the current Gulf Fishery Management Plan.
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