COVARIATION BETWEEN GROWTH AND MORPHOLOGY SUGGESTS ALTERNATIVE SIZE LIMITS FOR THE BLACKLIP ABALONE, HALIOTIS-RUBRA, IN NEW-SOUTH-WALES, AUSTRALIA

Citation
Dg. Worthington et al., COVARIATION BETWEEN GROWTH AND MORPHOLOGY SUGGESTS ALTERNATIVE SIZE LIMITS FOR THE BLACKLIP ABALONE, HALIOTIS-RUBRA, IN NEW-SOUTH-WALES, AUSTRALIA, Fishery bulletin, 93(3), 1995, pp. 551-561
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Fisheries
Journal title
ISSN journal
00900656
Volume
93
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
551 - 561
Database
ISI
SICI code
0090-0656(1995)93:3<551:CBGAMS>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Growth of the blacklip abalone, Haliotis rubra, was estimated from 1,4 64 individuals that were tagged and left at large for up to five years at seven sites in New South Wales, Australia. Both the shape of the f itted growth curves and the average growth rates differed significantl y among sites, separated by only 1-20 km. There was also significant v ariation in the growth of individual abalone within sites and this var iation differed among sites. Abalone at sites where they grew quickly reached larger lengths and were morphologically different from those a t sites where they grew slowly. For example, the shells of abalone fro m sites where they grew slowly were wider and heavier at a given lengt h than those from sites where they grew quickly. The implication that rates of growth in width are less variable than growth in length sugge sts that a minimum legal width limit may be more appropriate than the present size limit that is based on length. A minimum legal width limi t would redistribute fishing effort away from sites where abalone grow in length quickly towards sites where they grow slowly, including sit es which are presently unfished because few individuals reach the mini mum legal length. If this were possible, it would reduce the differenc es in exploitation among sites which, at present, have the potential t o seriously deplete populations at sites where individuals grow quickl y.