Fish Stocks on the Rise
Increased biomass in red gurnard and orange roughy fisheries has seen a rise in catch limits.
The Ministry for Primary Industries announced the adjustments as part of their twice-yearly fisheries sustainability review.
The orange roughy fishery - ORH3B Puysegur - south of Stewart Island has been reopened after the seafood industry agreed to cease fishing in 1998 to allow the stock to increase in size.
Deepwater Group chief executive, George Clement, said the stock has now rebuilt to almost 50 percent of the original biomass.
“The commercial catch limit here has been increased to 347 tonnes, allowing a very conservative harvest rate of less than four orange roughy out of every 100 in the population,” said Clement.
“This is yet another example of world-class fisheries management. Where industry, government and scientists collaborate in the best long-term interests of the fishery. It follows the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certification of three other orange roughy stocks as sustainable late last year.”
The commercial catch for red gurnard along the South Island’s west coast (GUR7) rose from 845 to 975 tonnes.
Southern Inshore Fisheries chief executive Carol Scott said good recruitment of juveniles into the fishery saw an increase in stock size.
“Red gurnard is one species within the very important mixed trawl fishery on the west coast of the South Island,” Scott said.
“The increase to the TACC for red gurnard from the west coast South Island fishery was provided as a consequence of increasing abundance shown by the biennial independent trawl survey by NIWA and commitment by Southern Inshore quota owners to fund regular updates to the catch per unit effort analyses, which are peer-reviewed by the MPI working group.”