and speartooth shark
Transcription
and speartooth shark
Acoustic monitoring of sawfish (Pristis spp.) and speartooth shark (Glyphis sp. A) in remote Cape York Peninsula Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 Funding • Sawfish (Pristis spp.) - 3 year NHT 2 project crossing marine, estuarine and freshwater boundaries • Speartooth shark (Glyphis sp. A) - 12 month DEW threatened species network grant Project Objective 1) Investigate short & long term patterns in behavior, movement and habitat use of sawfish and speartooth shark to help mitigate threatening processes 2) Educate and raise community awareness to the issues threatening the survival of protected species within their local area and the biodiversity requirements to protect and preserve these animals. Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 Project description Sawfish & Speartooth shark (all size classes) • net & line caught specimens (Commercial, Recreational & Indigenous) Tags • V16 temp & depth sensor tags, V16 coded & continuous tags, internal (AE DVD) & external deployment Monitoring • Active tracking VR100 • remote logging VR2W (permanent mooring) • data download & active track every 2nd month • unique VR2W retrieval system to allow for community participation • Mapoon ranger and Industry involvement – logistical support for mooring deployment, data download and tagging operations Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 Study site Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 Project rationale – community involvement Protected species - populations not evenly distributed - rare or low in abundance - often restricted to remote habitats - can be large & difficult to handle “Cape York is nearly logistically impossible to survey without local community support” Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 “Sawfish and speartooth shark fit these characteristics” Project rationale – community involvement Community participation • influence “on the ground” change to help mitigate threatening processes • raising local awareness of biodiversity issues through a “hands on” approach “out on country” Both key outcomes of the NHT2 business objectives • help facilitate project – logistical support (deployment & monitoring), reduce the risk of equipment loss through theft and fouling (floating debris, trees), capture of animals Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 140°E Sawfish distribution • Queensland Australia Wenloc k N3 Fishery (0 to 7 nm) er Riv narrow sawfish is commonly found in inshore and offshore waters, bays and estuary mouths 144°E Weipa Aurukun • freshwater sawfish inhabit all of the major Gulf river systems and found more irregularly in inshore waters along foreshores, in bays and estuaries r he Arc Gulf of Carpentaria Riv er N9 Fishery (7 to 25 nm) 15°S Mitc hell River Kowanyama Nassau River • dwarf & green sawfish restricted to n River G ilb er t Arthurs Ck inshore waters rivers/estuaries and bays of northwestern Cape York & western GoC Staa te ers nd R. Bynoe Fli Burketown Karumba Norman Rive r River Ri ve r % Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 0 50 100 Kilometres 150 140°E Spear-tooth shark distribution 144°E Queensland Australia Wenloc k er Ri v N3 Fishery (0 to 7 nm) Weipa • restricted to northwestern Cape York Aurukun Rivers/estuaries and bays her Arc Gulf of Carpentaria • hasn’t been recorded on the east coast since early 1980 R iv er N9 Fishery (7 to 25 nm) 15°S Mitc hell River Kowanyama Nassau River Staa te n River Arthurs G ilb er t Ck Bynoe Rive r River R. e rs nd Fli Burketown Karumba Norman Ri ve r % Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 0 50 100 Kilometres 150 Risk assessment considerations • Remote area operation Mapoon - seasonal vehicle access - travel cost - lack of infrastructure support • Occupational Hazards - crocodiles, stingers, sharks - fouling from floating debris - bio-fouling of equipment - cyclonic weather/flooding - theft and vandalism of equipment Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 Management of associated risks • Remote area operation Mapoon - for the community or industry its local “on the ground” • Occupational Hazards - VR2W retrieval line on mooring - regular checks - anti-foul equipment - storm/flood watch pull equipment - neighborhood watch theory Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005 Project photos Delivery © The State of Queensland (Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries) 2005