Sustainability of the Western Rock Lobster Fishery: A review of past progress and future challenges

The Western Rock (spiny) Lobster Fishery has 594 boats operating about 57,000 pots. The average annual catch of 11,000 tonnes is valued at around US$150 million. In addition to the commercial catch, recreational fishers take about 600 tonnes a year. Sustainability in this fishery is maintained by...

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Main Authors: Phillips, Bruce, Melville-Smith, R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.rsmas.miami.edu/bms/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/29501
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author Phillips, Bruce
Melville-Smith, R.
author_facet Phillips, Bruce
Melville-Smith, R.
author_sort Phillips, Bruce
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The Western Rock (spiny) Lobster Fishery has 594 boats operating about 57,000 pots. The average annual catch of 11,000 tonnes is valued at around US$150 million. In addition to the commercial catch, recreational fishers take about 600 tonnes a year. Sustainability in this fishery is maintained by analysis of a comprehensive fisheries database, some of which dates back to the 1960s (e.g. catch, effort, length-frequencies, fishery-independent breeding-stock surveys, puerulus settlement monitoring, recreational catch monitoring); an extensive set of management controls (including a limited fishing season and legal minimum and maximum sizes); and an effective compliance program. Effort in the fishery is controlled by input restrictions on the number of pots allowed and number of days fishing, which are implemented after considerable consultation with industry. The principal method of ensuring the sustainability of the fishery is by monitoring the size of the breeding stock, using data from both a commercial at-sea monitoring program and an annual fishery-independent breeding-stock survey. When the breeding stock fell to low levels in the early 1990s, management initiatives succeeded in returning it to what are considered to be safe levels. Catches are currently high, but fishers have acquired sufficient scientific knowledge to understand that catches will fluctuate for environmental reasons and to take this into account in their fishing operations. Environmental effects have been shown to drive the level of settlement in a particular season. These settlement levels are in turn highly correlated with catches three to four years later, which provides a means of predicting future catches and managing the fishery accordingly. There are issues to be considered in assessing the sustainability of this fishery in the future. The fishery may be overly reliant on egg production from the Abrolhos Islands; catching power of the commercial fleet is increasing due to improvements in gear and technological equipment; growth in catches made by the recreational sector are currently unconstrained; pueruli may be harvested for aquaculture in the near future; and regulations protecting the female brood stock more than the male population could lead to reproductive issues. These potential threats are considered to be low, but will need to be monitored. The fishery was awarded Marine Stewardship Council certification in March 2000, the first in the world to receive this imprimatur.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-295012017-01-30T13:13:18Z Sustainability of the Western Rock Lobster Fishery: A review of past progress and future challenges Phillips, Bruce Melville-Smith, R. enforcement monitoring research recreational Australia management commercial Panulirus cygnus The Western Rock (spiny) Lobster Fishery has 594 boats operating about 57,000 pots. The average annual catch of 11,000 tonnes is valued at around US$150 million. In addition to the commercial catch, recreational fishers take about 600 tonnes a year. Sustainability in this fishery is maintained by analysis of a comprehensive fisheries database, some of which dates back to the 1960s (e.g. catch, effort, length-frequencies, fishery-independent breeding-stock surveys, puerulus settlement monitoring, recreational catch monitoring); an extensive set of management controls (including a limited fishing season and legal minimum and maximum sizes); and an effective compliance program. Effort in the fishery is controlled by input restrictions on the number of pots allowed and number of days fishing, which are implemented after considerable consultation with industry. The principal method of ensuring the sustainability of the fishery is by monitoring the size of the breeding stock, using data from both a commercial at-sea monitoring program and an annual fishery-independent breeding-stock survey. When the breeding stock fell to low levels in the early 1990s, management initiatives succeeded in returning it to what are considered to be safe levels. Catches are currently high, but fishers have acquired sufficient scientific knowledge to understand that catches will fluctuate for environmental reasons and to take this into account in their fishing operations. Environmental effects have been shown to drive the level of settlement in a particular season. These settlement levels are in turn highly correlated with catches three to four years later, which provides a means of predicting future catches and managing the fishery accordingly. There are issues to be considered in assessing the sustainability of this fishery in the future. The fishery may be overly reliant on egg production from the Abrolhos Islands; catching power of the commercial fleet is increasing due to improvements in gear and technological equipment; growth in catches made by the recreational sector are currently unconstrained; pueruli may be harvested for aquaculture in the near future; and regulations protecting the female brood stock more than the male population could lead to reproductive issues. These potential threats are considered to be low, but will need to be monitored. The fishery was awarded Marine Stewardship Council certification in March 2000, the first in the world to receive this imprimatur. 2005 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/29501 http://www.rsmas.miami.edu/bms/ fulltext
spellingShingle enforcement
monitoring
research
recreational
Australia
management
commercial
Panulirus cygnus
Phillips, Bruce
Melville-Smith, R.
Sustainability of the Western Rock Lobster Fishery: A review of past progress and future challenges
title Sustainability of the Western Rock Lobster Fishery: A review of past progress and future challenges
title_full Sustainability of the Western Rock Lobster Fishery: A review of past progress and future challenges
title_fullStr Sustainability of the Western Rock Lobster Fishery: A review of past progress and future challenges
title_full_unstemmed Sustainability of the Western Rock Lobster Fishery: A review of past progress and future challenges
title_short Sustainability of the Western Rock Lobster Fishery: A review of past progress and future challenges
title_sort sustainability of the western rock lobster fishery: a review of past progress and future challenges
topic enforcement
monitoring
research
recreational
Australia
management
commercial
Panulirus cygnus
url http://www.rsmas.miami.edu/bms/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/29501