Plenary (SPD_FINAL 08)
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Plenary (SPD_07)
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Plenary (SPD_06)
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Title: Fisheries Assessment Plenary May 2017: Stock Assessments and Stock Status
87_SPD_2017.pdf
(1.1 MB)
The May 2017 Fisheries Plenary Report summarises fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information for 83 of New Zealand’s commercial fish species or species groups in a series of Working Group or Plenary reports. Each species or species group is split into 1-10 stocks for management purposes. SPD
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Title: Fisheries Assessment Plenary May 2016: Stock Assessments and Stock Status
87_SPD_2016_FINAL.pdf
(1.1 MB)
The May 2016 Fisheries Plenary Report summarises fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information for 83 of New Zealand’s commercial fish species or species groups in a series of Working Group or Plenary reports. Each species or species group is split into 1-10 stocks for management purposes. SPD.
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Title: Fisheries Assessment Plenary May 2015: Stock Assessments and Stock Status
87_SPD_2015_final.pdf
(1.1 MB)
The May 2015 Fisheries Plenary Report summarises fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information for 82 of New Zealand’s commercial fish species or species groups in a series of Working Group or Plenary reports. Each species or species group is split into 1-10 stocks for management purposes. SPD.
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The May 2014 Fisheries Plenary Report summarises fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information for 82 of New Zealand’s commercial fish species or species groups in a series of Working Group or Plenary reports. Each species or species group is split into 1-10 stocks for management purposes. Volume 3 covers the Red Snapper to Yellow-eyed Mullet.
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No estimates of current or reference biomass are available.
Although reported commercial catches of spiny dogfish were observed to increase in all major FMAs during the 1990s, the extent to which these increases can be attributed to changes in reporting practice (i.e., more accurate reporting of discards in recent times) is uncertain. Trawl surveys, on the other hand, indicate that there was a general increase in the abundance of spiny dogfish, particularly around the South Island, in the mid 1990s. It is unknown whether current catch limits are sustainable.
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This document summarises the most recent New Zealand fishery, biological, stock assessment and stock status information about spiny dogfish.
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