4.5 Article

Movement patterns of adult scallops (Pecten novaezealandiae) within a customary fisheries reserve: Implications for fine scale spatial management

Journal

FISHERIES RESEARCH
Volume 174, Issue -, Pages 160-166

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fishres.2015.09.020

Keywords

Scallop movement; Pecten novaezealandiae; Displacement; New Zealand; Indigenous fisheries

Categories

Funding

  1. Otago University Marine Science master's research fund

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The endemic scallop (Pecten novaezealandiae) is patchily distributed around New Zealand's coastline and supports customary, recreational and commercial harvest. Little information exists on post-settlement movement patterns of this species, which if significant, could impact their distribution, thus influencing the effectiveness of spatial refuges to fishing such as rahui (fisheries closure). The movements of P. novaezealandiae were examined within adult scallop habitat in a customary fisheries reserve, Te Whaka Te Wera (Paterson Inlet) Mataitai, Raldura (Stewart Island), New Zealand, by tracking the dispersal of tagged scallops from a central release point over two months. The average distance moved, calculated from recovered scallops, was 1.82 m per month, and these movement rates did not differ between the five sites or the two size classes examined. No significant directional movement was observed. The distribution of adult scallops is unlikely to be significantly affected by the scale of random movement observed. Once P. novaezealandiae are settled in appropriate habitat they are likely to only move in response to potential predators. Any spatial refuge created through management intervention, is likely to have positive effects through enhanced larval recruitment due to protection of breeding aggregations, not through movement of adults. The proposed reopening of the scallop fishery to hand collection with a prohibition on underwater breathing apparatus would maintain a deep water refuge for adult scallops, with potential benefits for adjacent fished shallow habitats through larval export. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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