Plenary (POS_07)
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Plenary (POS_06)
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Title: Fisheries Assessment Plenary, November 2016: stock assessments and stock status
11-POS_2015_FINAL.pdf
(613.7 kb)
The November 2016 Fisheries Plenary Report summarises fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information for 16 of New Zealand’s commercial fish species or species groups in a series of Working Group or Plenary reports. POS
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Title: Fisheries Assessment Plenary November 2014: Stock Assessments and Stock Status
11-POS_2014_FINAL.pdf
(1.3 MB)
The November 2014 Fisheries Plenary Report summarises fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information for 17 of New Zealand’s commercial fish species or species groups in a series of Working Group or Plenary reports. Porbeagle shark (POS)
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The November 2014 Fisheries Plenary Report summarises fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information for 17 of New Zealand’s commercial fish species or species groups in a series of Working Group or Plenary reports. Volume 1 covers the Introductory Sections to Ray’s Bream.
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Year of Most Recent Assessment: 2008
Reference Points
Target: Not established
Soft Limit: Not established
Hard Limit: Not established
Status in relation to Target Unknown
Status in relation to Limits Unknown
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Title: Fisheries Assessment Plenary, November 2015: stock assessments and stock status.
11-POS_2015_FINAL.pdf
(1.3 MB)
The November 2015 Fisheries Plenary Report summarises fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information for 16 of New Zealand’s commercial fish species or species groups in a series of Working Group or Plenary reports. Volume 1 covers Introductory to rays bream.
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This report presents the status of the fish stocks for highly migratory species, rock lobster and toothfish resulting from research and stock assessments up to 2010.
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This document summarises the most recent New Zealand fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information about Porbeagle Shark.
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There is no assessment for this stock so it is not known if the stock is at or above a level capable of producing the maximum sustainable yield. Furthermore, it is not known whether current catches or the TAC are at levels that will allow the stock to move towards the biomass that would support the maximum sustainable yield. However, declining catches over a period when effort has increased rapidly, low CPUE in recent years, combined with the low productivity of the species and a history of fishery collapses in the North Atlantic, are all cause for concern.
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