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Comisión para la Conservación de los Recursos Vivos Marinos Antárticos

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There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

Abstract: 

A large sample of otoliths from Bigeye Grenadier (Macrouros holotrachys) caught as bycatch in the Toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) fishery in subarea 48.3 were measured and weighed and their usefulness as predictors of fish size was determined. Otolith mass provides a good measure of fish length whereas otolith length and width measurements provide less accurate estimates of fish length. Seasonal variations in fish mass with reproductive condition need to be considered if predictions of mass from otolith mass are undertaken. Otolith size/fish size models should be derived for each fish population under investigation. The length of fish chosen in such studies should be representative of the size range consumed by predators.

Abstract: 

MtDNA and microsatellite loci were used to investigate the population structure of Patagonian toothfish at two Australian fishing locations (Macquarie Island, five collections; Heard and McDonald Islands (CCAMLR area 58.4.2), four collections) in the Southern Ocean. Additionally, a small sample of toothfish from the Shag Rocks/South Georgia fishing location (CCAMLR area 48.3) was also examined. Striking mtDNA heterogeneity was detected among the three fishing locations; spatial and temporal collections within the same fishing location were not significantly different. There was weak and inconsistent heterogeneity at several microsatellite loci among the ten collections, and no overall differentiation among the three fishing locations. The mtDNA heterogeneity suggests that gene flow between the two Australian fishing locations and more generally among the three locations within the Southern Ocean is restricted.

Abstract: 

Two sequential groundfish surveys in January-February 2000 revealed very different distribution of Raja georgiana, rather abundant species on the South Georgia shelf. The adult rays longer 206 mm were not caught during the second survey, the first one did not reveal such anomaly. The reasons which may caused such an absence are discussed.

There is no abstract available for this document.

Abstract: 

This research program compared seabird bycatch mitigation strategies over 2 years (1999 and 2000) in 2 major Alaska demersal longline fisheries: the Gulf of Alaska /Aleutian Island Individual Fishing Quota fishery for sablefish and halibut and the Bering Sea catcher-processor longline fishery for Pacific cod. We conducted tests over two years to account for inter-annual variation and allow for improvement and innovation. A key feature of this program was an industry-agency-academic collaboration to identify possible deterrents and test them on active fishing vessels under typical fishing conditions. We report the results of experimentally rigorous tests of seabird bycatch deterrents on the local abundance, attack rate, and hooking rate of seabirds in both fisheries. Based on our results, we recommend a suite of bycatch mitigation measures. Among all deterrents tested, paired streamer lines proved to be the most comprehensive solution. Paired streamer lines successfully reduced seabird bycatch in all years, regions, and fleets (88% to 100% relative to controls with no deterrent), despite the fact that we saw orders of magnitude variation in bycatch across years and in the case of the sablefish fishery, among regions. Paired streamer lines were robust in a wide range of wind conditions and required little adjustment as physical conditions changed. Functionally, paired streamer lines created a moving fence that precluded seabird attacks. Most significantly, this success came with no consequence to catch rates of target-fish or the rate of capture of other bycatch species, thus satisfying our primary goal. Several additional measures are discussed, including eliminating directed discharge of residual bait and offal while setting gear and the need for report card and peer-review systems, as well as the need for national and international action. The full report is available at http://www.wsg.washington.edu/pubs/seabirds/seabirdpaper.html Hard copies will be available at the meeting from Kim Rivera, NMFS, USA

There is no abstract available for this document.

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Correo electrónico: ccamlr [at] ccamlr [dot] org
Teléfono: +61 3 6210 1111
Facsímil: +61 3 6224 8744
Dirección: 181 Macquarie Street, Hobart, 7000, Tasmania, Australia

 

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