Fisheries Infosite

FAR 2024/07 Estimation of release survival of pelagic sharks and fish in New Zealand commercial fisheries

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FAR-2024-07-Estimation-Of-Release-Survival-Of-Pelagic-Sharks-And-Fish-4445.pdf

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FAR-2024-07-Estimation-Of-Release-Survival-Of-Pelagic-Sharks-And-Fish-4445.pdf (9.7 MB)

Abstract
 This project estimated survival of six pelagic species (southern bluefin tuna, Pacific bluefin tuna, swordfish, blue shark, mako shark, and porbeagle shark) following release from commercial fishing gear to inform a government review of their landing exceptions.
 
Fishery characterisations revealed that the main fishing gears responsible for discarded fish were surface longline (all species) and trawl (swordfish, mako, and porbeagle).
 
Literature reviews were conducted to document current knowledge on the status of an individual when brought to the vessel and ‘post-release’ survival (i.e., survival in the weeks to months following release) from these methods, as well as the factors that affect survival of each species. The key results were:
 
Bluefin tunas (including southern bluefin tuna and Pacific bluefin tuna) and swordfish typically have high post-release survival following capture by surface longline, with most studies reporting survival rates of 88% or greater for bluefin tunas and 50–88% for swordfish.
Blue shark have high at-vessel and post-release survival following capture by surface longline, with most studies reporting at-vessel and post-release survival rates of > 80%.
 
Mako have moderate to high at-vessel and post-release survival following capture by surface longline, with most studies reporting at-vessel and post-release survival rates ranging from about 50–87% and 56–94%, respectively.
Porbeagle have moderate to high at-vessel survival and variable post-release survival following capture by surface longline, with estimates of 56–79% and 25–90% for at-vessel and post-release survival, respectively.
There have been no comparable studies documenting at-vessel or post-release survival of swordfish, mako, or porbeagle from trawl.
 
A questionnaire was developed and circulated to fishers, fishery observers, and scientists with knowledge of each species to obtain their estimates of at-release survival (i.e., the probability the fish/shark was alive when put back into water), post-release survival, and combined survival (the probability an individual was both alive at release and survived following release) of the three shark species, and post-release survival of the thee fish species (in accordance with their current landing exceptions).
 
Questionnaire responses were used to derive survival probability range estimates for each species, with separate analyses conducted that included and excluded information from the literature.
 
For individuals released after capture by surface longline, the results of this analysis indicated post-release survival for southern bluefin tuna, Pacific bluefin tuna, and swordfish is likely to be high; blue shark are likely to have high at-release and post-release survival, and a medium-high combined survival; mako are likely to have medium at-release and medium-high post-release survival (reduced to medium if excluding information from the literature in the analysis), and low-medium combined survival; and porbeagle are likely to have low at-release survival, low-medium post-release survival, and low combined survival.
 
Post-release survival of swordfish released from trawl gear was likely to be low, and mako and porbeagle caught by trawl were likely to have low at-release, post-release, and combined survival.
 
These results, however, resulted from a small number of survey responses (only one respondent for trawl gear) and often without any comparable supporting published studies.
 
Survival estimates presented here should thus be interpreted with caution.


Document date
Wednesday, 14 February 2024
Document type
V 1.3
File format
Adobe PDF
File size
9.7 MB
Reference number
2024/07
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Uploaded from
FAR-2024-07-Estimation-Of-Release-Survival-Of-Pelagic-Sharks-And-Fish-4445.pdf

Uploaded date
Wednesday, 14 February 2024

Search tags
FAR: 2024/07;
ISSN: 1179-5352;
ISBN: 978-1-991120-82-3;
AUTHOR: Moore, B.R.; Finucci, B.;

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