Author:
Graham K. J.,Andrew N. L.,Hodgson K. E.
Abstract
Upper continental slope trawling grounds (200–650 m depth) off New South
Wales were surveyed with the same vessel and trawl gear and similar sampling
protocols in 1976–77 (during the early years of commercial exploitation)
and in 1996–97. The 1996–97 mean catch rate of sharks and rays,
pooled for the main 15 species (or species groups), was ~20% of the
1976–77 mean. Individual catch rates were substantially lower in
1996–97 for 13 of the 15 species or species groups. The greatest decline
was observed for dogsharks of the genus Centrophorus,
which were most abundant in 1976–77 but rarely caught 20 years later. In
contrast, 1996–97 catch rates of spiky dogshark
(Squalus megalops) and, to a lesser extent, whitefin
swell shark (Cephaloscyllium sp. A) were similar to
those in 1976–77. Trawling during 1979–81 provided data for nine
species, albeit not corrected for larger gear size, and the pooled mean catch
rate for sharks and rays in the depth range 300–525 m was ~28% of
the mean for 1976–77. The results suggest that the biomass of most
species of sharks and rays declined rapidly as the fishery developed and is
now at very low levels.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
128 articles.
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