12
results
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2018-109
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED
ORGANISATION:
Western Abalone Divers Association (WADA)
SPECIES
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2017-247
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED
Wild catch Barramundi Workshop to explore future options to improve fisheries
1. Convene a Barramundi stakeholder workshop in Cains on June 29th
2. Identify and agree causes of market failure
3. Confirm participants who will be responsible for Actions agreed
ORGANISATION:
Queensland Seafood Marketers Association Inc (QSMA)
SPECIES
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2023-066
PROJECT STATUS:
CURRENT
ORGANISATION:
Austral Fisheries Pty Ltd
SPECIES
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2022-107
PROJECT STATUS:
CURRENT
ORGANISATION:
True South Seafood
SPECIES
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2018-107
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED
Verification program for the use of 'Rapid Test Kits' to safeguard and grow the WA Shellfish Industry
The study aims to inform the use of rapid biotoxin test kits to inform management decisions by both growers and regulators.
ORGANISATION:
Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) WA
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2022-157
PROJECT STATUS:
CURRENT
ORGANISATION:
Curtin University
SPECIES
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2018-027
PROJECT STATUS:
CURRENT
Integrated approach to improving stock assessment of Black Jewfish
Black Jewfish Gonad staging guide 2020
ORGANISATION:
Charles Darwin University (CDU)
SPECIES
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2017-203
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED
Risk from Diarrhetic Shellfish Toxins and Dinophysis to the Australian Shellfish Industry
This study first examined DSTs in spiked and naturally contaminated shellfish - Sydney Rock Oysters (Saccostrea glomerata), Pacific Oysters (Magallana gigas/Crassostrea gigas), Blue Mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) and Pipis (Plebidonax deltoides/Donax deltoides), using LC-MS/MS ...
ORGANISATION:
University of Technology Sydney (UTS)
PROJECT NUMBER
•
2017-104
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED
NCCP: the likely medium- to long-term ecological outcomes of major carp population reductions
Experts predict that most ecosystems would be improved if carp numbers were reduced by at least 70 per cent.
ORGANISATION:
University of Canberra
SPECIES
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