The potential for hatchery-release programs to augment the harvest rates of fisheries can be limited by environmental factors associated with survival, growth and body condition among released individuals. We assessed spatial and temporal variability in the condition of postlarval and small juvenile (1-10 mm carapace length) eastern king prawns Penaeus plebejus Hess sampled from an estuarine population subjected to pilot releases of 3 million postlarvae per year in southeastern Australia. Variability in the length-weight relationship was used as a measure of condition and compared between (1) autumn/winter and spring/summer periods and (2) bare and macrophytic habitats for P. plebejus sampled from a population in a closed estuarine system. At a reference carapace length of 3.97 mm, condition was ~14% higher for individuals sampled from bare habitat and ~16% higher for those sampled during autumn/winter compared, respectively, with individuals sampled within macrophytic habitat and during spring/summer. Further experimental work on the factors investigated here is encouraged to increase our understanding of the environmental characteristics and mechanisms that lead to improved condition and thus persistence of stocked populations of P. plebejus.
KEY WORDS: Stock enhancement · Fisheries management · Habitat · Season · Prawns · Penaeid · ICOLL
Resale or republication not permitted without written consent of the publisherAquacult Environ Interact 2: [15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25] 2011 Although there are examples of successful stock enhancement programs (e.g. Leber & Arce 1996, McEachron et al. 1998, Zeimann 2003, some have been shown to impact negatively on receiving communities (e.g. Hilborn & Eggers 2000, Araki & Schmid 2010 and many have been considered economic failures because of poor longevity of enhanced populations and a consequent inability to supplement ex ploited populations (Blankenship & Leber 1995, Bell et al. 2005. For example, analysis of catch-and-release histories for Penaeus japonicus in Japan suggested that hatchery releases did not succeed in augmenting total production of this species (Hamasaki & Kitada 2006). In another instance, analysis of fishermen's log books following the release of postlarval and juvenile Homarus gammarus failed to show any evidence of successful enhancement of the species' stocks (Addison & Bannister 1994).The short-lived nature of many enhanced populations is often attributed to a poor understanding of the spatial and temporal environmental factors associated with maximum survival, growth and body condition among released individuals (Crowl et al. 1992, Einum & Fleming 2001. This has resulted in the indis cri mi nate release of many species into habitats and ecosystems that do not complement their seasonal and spatial requirements across critical life history stages (Leber 2002). Investigations of the most appropriate release strategies and long-term monitoring programs can significantly improve the success of stock enhancement efforts by def...