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Predation Risk within Fishing Gear and Implications for South Australian Rock Lobster Fisheries
Authors:Felipe Brice?o  Adrian Joseph Linnane  Juan Carlos Quiroz  Caleb Gardner  Gretta Tatyana Pecl
Institution:1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.; 2. South Australian Research and Development Institute (Aquatic Sciences), Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.; Seagrass Ecosystem Research Group, Swansea University, UNITED KINGDOM,
Abstract:Depredation of southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) within fishing gear by the Maori octopus (Pinnoctopus cordiformis) has economic and ecological impacts on valuable fisheries in South Australia. In addition, depredation rates can be highly variable resulting in uncertainties for the fishery. We examined how in-pot lobster predation was influenced by factors such as lobster size and sex, season, fishing zone, and catch rate. Using mixed modelling techniques, we found that in-pot predation risk increased with lobster size and was higher for male lobsters. In addition, the effect of catch rate of lobsters on predation risk by octopus differed among fishing zones. There was both a seasonal and a spatial component to octopus predation, with an increased risk within discrete fishing grounds in South Australia at certain times of the year. Information about predation within lobster gear can assist fishery management decision-making, potentially leading to significant reduction in economic losses to the fishery.
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