2011
DOI: 10.1071/mf10162
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Decadal trends in shark catches and effort from the New South Wales, Australia, Shark Meshing Program 1950 - 2010

Abstract: Abstract. The New South Wales (NSW) government has operated a program of netting beaches for the protection of swimmers and surfers against shark attack since 1937 in Sydney, and since 1949 in Newcastle and Wollongong. The scope and directives of the Shark Meshing Program have remained constant since its inception, with operational modifications in net specifications in 1972, changes in spatial deployment in 1972, 1987 and 1992, and the elimination of winter netting since 1989. This markedly increased meshing … Show more

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Cited by 131 publications
(129 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, the results of this study, and more extensive tracking of mobile species, are crucial to development of effective conservation and management policy. Currently the largest threats to adult C. leucas in eastern Australia are fishing activities including recreational and commercial fisheries (Macbeth et al, 2009), bather protection programs (Reid et al, 2011;Taylor et al, 2011), and habitat degradation (e.g., loss of mangrove habitat).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Therefore, the results of this study, and more extensive tracking of mobile species, are crucial to development of effective conservation and management policy. Currently the largest threats to adult C. leucas in eastern Australia are fishing activities including recreational and commercial fisheries (Macbeth et al, 2009), bather protection programs (Reid et al, 2011;Taylor et al, 2011), and habitat degradation (e.g., loss of mangrove habitat).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Management arrangements for bull sharks vary between Queensland (QLD) and New South Wales (NSW), the two state jurisdictions of eastern Australia where bull sharks occur. The species is not protected in either jurisdiction, and both QLD and NSW target larger C. leucas in shark control programs at popular swimming beaches (Reid et al, 2011;Taylor et al, 2011). Catches in NSW commercial fisheries occur mostly in the Ocean Trap and Line Fishery where a longline fishery has targeted large sharks (Macbeth et al, 2009).…”
Section: Marine Sciencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is probably again a result of differing movement patterns between sexes: females stay in the sampled coastal areas for longer periods of time, and this leads to measurable differences in muscle ÎŽ 13 C. Furthermore, evidence from electronic tagging suggests a seasonal northern migration by males to New South Wales (NSW) (Barnett et al 2011); 70% of Notorynchus cepedianus caught in the NSW shark control program are male and catches primarily occur in winter to spring (Reid et al 2011). In southeast Australia, fish predators (including sharks) north of the Tasman Front (~34°S) have lower ÎŽ 15 N than those found further south, probably as a result of differences in baseline ÎŽ 15 N (Revill et al 2009), as particulate organic matter ÎŽ 15 N is lower north of the Tasman Front than in waters further south (~6 vs. ~10 ‰) (Baird et al 2008).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The QSCP drumlines are highly selective for G. cuvier (91% of catch) while only 9% are caught in nets (Holmes et al, 2012). In the net-only NSWSMP the overall catch of these species is considerably less than in Queensland, with 49 G. cuvier and 110 C. carcharias caught between 1990, and only 11 C. leucas caught between 1998(Reid et al, 2011.Despite these long-standing programs being in place on the Australian east coast, equivalent peer-reviewed publications on large shark biology, compared with the South African and Hawaiian research, have been less forthcoming (e.g. Paterson, 1990;Simpfendorfer, 1992a;Krogh, 1994;Sumpton et al, 2010;Noriega et al, 2011;Werry et al, 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There was no evidence of multiple paternity, based on the litters of the four sharks examined using nine microsatellite loci, which may have implications for the genetic diversity of this population. Reid and Krogh, 1992;Simpfendorfer, 1992a;Krogh, 1994;Last and Stevens, 1994;Dudley, 1997;Green et al, 2009;Fisheries, 2006;Reid et al, 2011). …”
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confidence: 99%