Are the spiny lobster fisheries in Australia sustainable?

Australia has a wide range of spiny (rock) lobster species but this review concentrates on the four largest commercial and recreational fisheries and their management. Jasus edwardsii supports significant commercial fisheries in South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and southern Western Australia, wit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Phillips, Bruce, Melville-Smith, Roy, Linnane, A., Gardner, C., Walker, T., Liggins, G.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Marine Biological Association of India 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2832
_version_ 1848744061379280896
author Phillips, Bruce
Melville-Smith, Roy
Linnane, A.
Gardner, C.
Walker, T.
Liggins, G.
author_facet Phillips, Bruce
Melville-Smith, Roy
Linnane, A.
Gardner, C.
Walker, T.
Liggins, G.
author_sort Phillips, Bruce
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Australia has a wide range of spiny (rock) lobster species but this review concentrates on the four largest commercial and recreational fisheries and their management. Jasus edwardsii supports significant commercial fisheries in South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and southern Western Australia, with an insignificant amount taken in southern New South Wales. Most of the southern rock lobster commercial fisheries in Australia operate under quota management with annual Total Allowable Catches (TACs) set for the fisheries; the exception to this is in Western Australia where the small J. edwardsii fishery currently operates as an input-controlled fishery. Although the New South Wales eastern rock lobster (Sagmariasus verreauxi) catch is small it forms the basis of an important cultural fishery. There has been an artisanal fishery on the tropical lobster (Panulirus ornatus) in the Torres Strait and the east coast of Papua New Guinea for hundreds of years.Commercial fishing is restricted to the indigenous Torres Strait Islanders a small number of non-indigenous Australians. It is managed under treaty arrangements with Papua New Guinea (PNG). The western rock lobster fishery for Panulirus cygnus is Australia’s largest commercial rock lobster fishery. Effort in this fishery is controlled by the regulation of pot numbers and the number of days that fishing is permitted in the season. There have been a number of dramatic changes in several of Australia’s commercial spiny lobster fisheries in recent years including declines in annual landings. This paper outlines changes that have occurred in these fisheries, summarises new management arrangements, and discusses the status of the stocks and the current economic and social situation of each fishery.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T05:55:28Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-2832
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T05:55:28Z
publishDate 2010
publisher Marine Biological Association of India
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-28322017-01-30T10:26:21Z Are the spiny lobster fisheries in Australia sustainable? Phillips, Bruce Melville-Smith, Roy Linnane, A. Gardner, C. Walker, T. Liggins, G. Jasus edwardsii Sagmariasus verreauxi Panulirus ornatus Australia sustainability Spiny lobster fisheries Panulirus cygnus Australia has a wide range of spiny (rock) lobster species but this review concentrates on the four largest commercial and recreational fisheries and their management. Jasus edwardsii supports significant commercial fisheries in South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and southern Western Australia, with an insignificant amount taken in southern New South Wales. Most of the southern rock lobster commercial fisheries in Australia operate under quota management with annual Total Allowable Catches (TACs) set for the fisheries; the exception to this is in Western Australia where the small J. edwardsii fishery currently operates as an input-controlled fishery. Although the New South Wales eastern rock lobster (Sagmariasus verreauxi) catch is small it forms the basis of an important cultural fishery. There has been an artisanal fishery on the tropical lobster (Panulirus ornatus) in the Torres Strait and the east coast of Papua New Guinea for hundreds of years.Commercial fishing is restricted to the indigenous Torres Strait Islanders a small number of non-indigenous Australians. It is managed under treaty arrangements with Papua New Guinea (PNG). The western rock lobster fishery for Panulirus cygnus is Australia’s largest commercial rock lobster fishery. Effort in this fishery is controlled by the regulation of pot numbers and the number of days that fishing is permitted in the season. There have been a number of dramatic changes in several of Australia’s commercial spiny lobster fisheries in recent years including declines in annual landings. This paper outlines changes that have occurred in these fisheries, summarises new management arrangements, and discusses the status of the stocks and the current economic and social situation of each fishery. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2832 Marine Biological Association of India fulltext
spellingShingle Jasus edwardsii
Sagmariasus verreauxi
Panulirus ornatus
Australia
sustainability
Spiny lobster fisheries
Panulirus cygnus
Phillips, Bruce
Melville-Smith, Roy
Linnane, A.
Gardner, C.
Walker, T.
Liggins, G.
Are the spiny lobster fisheries in Australia sustainable?
title Are the spiny lobster fisheries in Australia sustainable?
title_full Are the spiny lobster fisheries in Australia sustainable?
title_fullStr Are the spiny lobster fisheries in Australia sustainable?
title_full_unstemmed Are the spiny lobster fisheries in Australia sustainable?
title_short Are the spiny lobster fisheries in Australia sustainable?
title_sort are the spiny lobster fisheries in australia sustainable?
topic Jasus edwardsii
Sagmariasus verreauxi
Panulirus ornatus
Australia
sustainability
Spiny lobster fisheries
Panulirus cygnus
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2832