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Comparison of baited longlines and baited underwater cameras for assessing the composition of continental slope deepwater fish assemblages off southeast Australia

Citation

McLean, DL and Green, M and Harvey, ES and Williams, Alan and Daley, R and Graham, KJ, Comparison of baited longlines and baited underwater cameras for assessing the composition of continental slope deepwater fish assemblages off southeast Australia, Deep-Sea Research, Part I, 98 pp. 10-20. ISSN 0967-0637 (2015) [Refereed Article]

Copyright Statement

Copyright 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

DOI: doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2014.11.013

Abstract

Expansion of demersal fisheries into the deep sea has driven a need for methods to provide information on the status of deepwater fish assemblages, especially for vulnerable species. For this purpose, we compared co-located sampling by baited longlines and baited remote underwater video systems (BRUVs) off southeastern Australia and found these techniques observed different elements of the continental slope fish assemblage, but were complementary for monitoring needs. Of the 94 species surveyed in total, only 32% were common to both survey techniques, with BRUVs sampling fewer species, with 51 species detected compared with 73 species captured by longlines. Species detected exclusively by BRUVs (21 spp) included those not vulnerable to longline hooks, and those with large-body size-including several chondrichthyans. One group of chondrichthyans, gulper sharks (Centrophorus) were the focus of this study because they are listed as conservation dependent under Australia's Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act, and are subject to a management plan that requires their recovery to be monitored. Very few gulper sharks were observed by BRUVs (n=10). Longlines captured 773 gulper sharks suggesting this technique provides a more effective means of sampling. However, most longline caught sharks were either dead or in poor condition on capture, further depleting this vulnerable species. BRUVs are non-lethal, but a high sampling intensity is likely to be needed to detect changes in gulper shark abundance within typical management timeframes (years).

Item Details

Item Type:Refereed Article
Keywords:BRUVs; Demersal longlines; Fish assemblage composition; Fishery management; Fishery monitoring; Gulper shark; Biodiversity; Conservation; Environmental protection; Fisheries; Surveys; BRUVs; Demersal longlines; Fish assemblages; Fishery management
Research Division:Agricultural, Veterinary and Food Sciences
Research Group:Fisheries sciences
Research Field:Fisheries management
Objective Division:Animal Production and Animal Primary Products
Objective Group:Fisheries - wild caught
Objective Field:Fisheries - wild caught not elsewhere classified
UTAS Author:Williams, Alan (Dr Alan Williams)
ID Code:118827
Year Published:2015
Web of Science® Times Cited:20
Deposited By:Zoology
Deposited On:2017-07-20
Last Modified:2017-08-09
Downloads:0

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