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Fears for threatened orange roughy as NZ super trawler returns to Tasmanian waters | Tasmania

Fears for threatened orange roughy as NZ super trawler returns to Tasmanian waters | Tasmania

A New Zealand super trawler has returned to Australia to target a threatened fish amid fears previous trips may be linked to a population crash.

Conservationists are disturbed by Australia’s decision to authorise the return of the Amaltal Explorer, a factory ship that will net orange roughy.

The​ extraordinary ​fish can live for more than 140 years and the species is listed as conservation-dependent under national laws for imperilled wildlife.

They do not start to breed until they are about 30, leaving them highly vulnerable to overfishing.

That’s exactly what happened in the 1980s and 90s when ​stocks fell off a cliff and in 2006 Australia was forced to institute a fishing ban.

The one exception at the time was the Cascade Plateau fishing zone south-east of Hobart.

But the Australian Marine Conservation Society fears that site could now be in big trouble​. It also has ​mounting concerns for the reopened ​eastern fishery off Tasmania’s north-east now ​the trawler is back.

The ship has onboard processing and freezers allowing it to fish in one spot for long periods. It’s billed as the workhorse of a deep-sea fleet owned by Talley’s – one of New Zealand’s largest agribusinesses.

A sustainable seafood campaigner, Adrian Meder, said that after the trawler fished ​Cascade Plateau in 2021 and 2022​, the Australia industry began complaining consistent catches at the site had vanished.

He cited two trips by one of Australia’s largest deepwater trawlers last year that only managed seven tonnes from a total allowable catch (TAC) of 437 tonnes.

Meder said he was deeply troubled by the Australian Fisheries Management Authority’s failure to follow a scientific recommendation from the CSIRO to halve catch limits in the eastern zone.

​Catch volumes that were not realised last year when the super trawler did not fish in that area have also been carried over, potentially doubling what it could take this year, he said.

In September a research and scientific committee that feeds advice up the chain to the management authority met. Minutes from that meeting suggest fishery managers were comforted, not concerned, by catches at Cascade Plateau as low as 2% and 4% of what was approved.

“This lowers the ​[group’s] concern for recommending the TAC be rolled over for next season,” the minutes said.

“Despite the low catch in recent years, ​industry members noted the need to maintain the TAC at a level that will incentivise fishing in the region and support ongoing data collection.”

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There was specific mention that further cuts “might make the stock commercially unviable”.

​Meder said the commercial considerations were worrying.

“They said you’ve got to incentivise fishing – well, I don’t think you do,” he said. “You want to be really, really careful that the fishing you are doing isn’t causing further problems of the sort that we well understand.”

The management authority said the trawler would only fish the eastern zone this time, intending to catch 60% of the 1,320-tonne TAC using quota owned by Australian companies.

It said catch limits were based on a 2021 CSIRO assessment that would allow stocks in the east to rebuild, and the latest assessment from Cascade Plateau, now 15 years old, suggests it was sustainable.

New assessments are due next year.

Talley’s said orange roughy stocks off Tasmania were “highly sustainable” and the vessel would spend half its time collecting data on the orange roughy for the CSIRO.

“The benefits to Australia are significant through the science being gathered and the provision of orange roughy for Australians,” said Leon Moore, the group’s general manager of fishing.

Australia’s South East Trawl Fishing Industry Association said Australian vessels could not catch the orange roughy “so without the Explorer the fish would be uncaught and quota owners would pay levies”.


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