Fisheries Queensland, Department of Employment, Economic Development and Innovation, Cairns, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2011;6(6):e21094. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0021094. Epub 2011 Jun 13.
The Queensland East Coast Otter Trawl Fishery (ECOTF) for penaeid shrimp fishes within Australia's Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area (GBRWHA). The past decade has seen the implementation of conservation and fisheries management strategies to reduce the impact of the ECOTF on the seabed and improve biodiversity conservation. New information from electronic vessel location monitoring systems (VMS) provides an opportunity to review the interactions between the ECOTF and spatial closures for biodiversity conservation.
We used fishing metrics and spatial information on the distribution of closures and modelled VMS data in a geographical information system (GIS) to assess change in effort of the trawl fishery from 2001-2009 and to quantify the exposure of 70 reef, non-reef and deep water bioregions to trawl fishing. The number of trawlers and the number of days fished almost halved between 2001 and 2009 and new spatial closures introduced in 2004 reduced the area zoned available for trawl fishing by 33%. However, we found that there was only a relatively minor change in the spatial footprint of the fishery as a result of new spatial closures. Non-reef bioregions benefited the most from new spatial closures followed by deep and reef bioregions.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Although the catch of non target species remains an issue of concern for fisheries management, the small spatial footprint of the ECOTF relative to the size of the GBRWHA means that the impact on benthic habitats is likely to be negligible. The decline in effort as a result of fishing industry structural adjustment, increasing variable costs and business decisions of fishers is likely to continue a trend to fish only in the most productive areas. This will provide protection for most benthic habitats without any further legislative or management intervention.
昆士兰东海岸刺网渔业(ECOTF)捕捞澳大利亚大堡礁世界遗产区(GBRWHA)内的对虾鱼类。过去十年,为了减少 ECOTF 对海床的影响并改善生物多样性保护,实施了保护和渔业管理策略。电子船只位置监测系统(VMS)的新信息提供了审查 ECOTF 与生物多样性保护空间关闭之间相互作用的机会。
我们使用捕捞指标和关于关闭的分布的空间信息,并在地理信息系统(GIS)中对模型化的 VMS 数据进行建模,以评估 2001-2009 年拖网渔业的努力变化,并量化 70 个珊瑚礁、非珊瑚礁和深水生物区带暴露于拖网捕捞的程度。拖网渔船的数量和捕捞天数在 2001 年至 2009 年期间几乎减少了一半,2004 年引入的新空间关闭措施将可用于拖网捕捞的区域减少了 33%。然而,我们发现,由于新的空间关闭,渔业的空间足迹仅发生了相对较小的变化。非珊瑚礁生物区带受益最大,其次是深水区和珊瑚礁生物区带。
结论/意义:尽管非目标物种的捕捞仍然是渔业管理关注的问题,但 ECOTF 的空间足迹相对大堡礁世界遗产区的大小来说很小,这意味着对底栖生境的影响可能微不足道。由于渔业结构调整、可变成本增加和渔民的商业决策,捕捞努力的下降可能会继续只在最具生产力的地区捕捞的趋势。这将在没有任何进一步立法或管理干预的情况下,为大多数底栖生境提供保护。