Hart, A. M., Thomson, A. W., and Murphy, D. 2011. Environmental influences on stock abundance and fishing power in the silver-lipped pearl oyster fishery. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 68: . Stock variability, fishing power, and the contributing environmental factors were examined for the Australian silver-lipped pearl oyster, Pinctada maxima. The approach was to compare the longer-term time-series of stock abundance derived from catch per unit effort against the shorter-term 0+ spat-settlement index to seek agreement on causal factors. Indices of stock abundance were established with generalized linear models that simultaneously examined the influence of technological and environmental factors, resulting in a predictive model with a 3-year forecast. The advent of global positioning systems caused a 30% increase in fishing power. A negative relationship between abundance and rainfall, and a positive relationship between abundance and temperature, was detected for both spat settlement and fishery abundance. Northerly winds (negative northings) from December to February significantly enhanced settlement, but easterly winds (negative eastings) in the main fishing month of May influenced fishing power positively. After standardizing for the effects of fishing power, a 150% increase in stock abundance of the exploited component of P. maxima stocks was detected between 2004 and 2009. A major contributor to this increase was an exceptionally high settlement of spat in 2005, associated with a rare combination of environmental conditions. Once this year class grows beyond the target size classes, abundance is predicted to decrease to the normal levels.
Blue swimmer crab (Portunus pelagicus) fisheries in Western Australia have generally been considered robust to recruitment overfishing, as the minimum legal size for retention of these crabs in both the commercial and recreational crab fisheries are set well above the size at sexual maturity allowing crabs to spawn at least once before entering the fishery. However, the Cockburn Sound crab stock suffered a recruitment collapse, with three key factors: (a) the fishery is near the edge of this species distribution and hence vulnerable to environmental fluctuations; (b) a number of consecutive years of poor environmental conditions resulted in poor recruitments; and (c) high fishing pressure continued on these low recruitments. This study indicates that water temperatures at the start of the spawning season positively influence the strong stock-recruitment relationship for P. pelagicus in Cockburn Sound. Apparently, warm water temperatures at the onset of spawning result in the larger females producing additional broods of eggs, and therefore a far greater number of larvae over the short spawning season. This relationship produces catch predictions for this fishery a year ahead and provides information for the development of biological reference points for management.
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