Little is known about the population trajectory and dynamics of many marine invertebrates because of a lack of robust observational data. The giant Australian cuttlefish (Sepia apama) is IUCN-listed as Near Threatened because the largest known breeding aggregation of this species in northern Spencer Gulf, South Australia, has declined markedly since the turn of the century. We used by-catch records from long-term trawl surveys to derive abundance data for S. apama and commercial cuttlefish harvest data as a measure of exploitation. Using Bayesian hierarchical models to account for zeroinflation and spatial dependence in these abundance counts, we demonstrated a high probability of broad-scale declines in the density of S. apama, particularly surrounding the primary aggregation site, which supports the recent closure of the entire S. apama fishery in northern Spencer Gulf. Historical harvest data were positively correlated with S. apama density estimated from the trawl surveys, suggesting that the commercial cuttlefish catch tracks the species abundance. Our results also indicated the possibility that the known S. apama breeding grounds might be supplemented by individuals that were spawned elsewhere in northern Spencer Gulf.
Journal article
Evidence for a broad-scale decline in giant Australian cuttlefish (Sepia apama) abundance from non-targeted survey data
Marine and Freshwater Research, Vol.66, pp.692-700
2015
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Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Evidence for a broad-scale decline in giant Australian cuttlefish (Sepia apama) abundance from non-targeted survey data
- Creators
- Thomas AA Prowse - University of AdelaideBronwyn M Gillanders - University of AdelaideBarry W Brook - University of AdelaideAnthony J Fowler - South Australian Research and Development InstituteKarina C Hall - Southern Cross UniversityMichael A Steer - South Australian Research and Development InstituteCamille Mellin - University of AdelaideN Clisby - University of AdelaideJason E Tanner - University of AdelaideTim M Ward - South Australian Research and Development InstituteDamien A Fordham - University of Adelaide
- Publication Details
- Marine and Freshwater Research, Vol.66, pp.692-700
- Identifiers
- 3842; 991012821225802368
- Academic Unit
- School of Environment, Science and Engineering; Faculty of Science and Engineering
- Resource Type
- Journal article