Puerulus settlement forecasting in a harvest strategy evaluation of the rock lobster fishery in South Australia

Author:

McGarvey Richard1,Linnane Adrian12,Feenstra John E.12,Matthews Janet M.1,McLeay Lachlan J.12,Jones Annabel3,Toumazos Kyriakos4,de Lestang Simon5

Affiliation:

1. South Australian Research and Development Institute (Aquatic Sciences) Henley Beach South Australia Australia

2. Flinders University, College of Science and Engineering Bedford Park South Australia Australia

3. Department of Primary Industries and Regions Adelaide South Australia Australia

4. Southern Australian Northern Zone Rock Lobster Fisherman's Association Adelaide South Australia Australia

5. Western Australian Fisheries and Marine Research Laboratories, Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development Government of Western Australia Hillarys Western Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractHarvest strategies are utilised in the management of fishery resources globally. Critical to their success is harvest strategy evaluation, whereby future performance is assessed through projection modelling. Using the observed relationship between a puerulus settlement index and model‐estimated recruitment, we evaluated a southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) harvest strategy in South Australia. Short‐to‐medium puerulus settlement recruitment forecasting was incorporated into future projections of catch, catch per unit effort, and percent unexploited egg production (%UEP) during 2019–2022. Observed values of indicators that closely aligned with projected outputs indicated that puerulus forecasting underpinned reliable evaluation of future fishery performance. A key objective of the harvest strategy was to increase egg production in the fishery, with a 20% unexploited egg production targeted by 2036. The target was reached under the proposed strategy, but was sensitive to recruitment, thereby highlighting the need to consider climate change impacts in forecasting scenarios.

Publisher

Wiley

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