Ra. Campbell et al., Evaluating large-scale experimental designs for management of coral trout on the Great Barrier, ECOL APPL, 11(6), 2001, pp. 1763-1777
While biological information about targeted species is considered necessary
for managing fisheries, alone it has proved insufficient to successfully m
anage both fisheries and ecosystems. Controlled experimental manipulations
of fishing effort is likely to be the best mechanism for empirically assess
ing the responses of targeted stocks, other reef organisms, and fishing pra
ctices to changes in fishing pressure. Line fishing is a major extractive i
ndustry on the Great Barrier Reef of Australia, which is a mosaic of nearly
3000 separate reefs spread over 15 degrees of latitude and has high conser
vation value. Computer simulations of the population dynamics of the main t
arget species, the common coral trout Plectropomus leopardus (Serranidae),
based on recent field research were used to evaluate various designs for a
large-scale experiment to examine aspects of the effects of line fishing in
this region. The results indicated that large-scale experiments using whol
e coral reefs as units of experimental manipulation could be designed such
that the field data collected would have good statistical power to detect i
mpacts of fishing on target stocks and measure the responses of fished stoc
ks to protection from further fishing. Such information on the line fishery
is currently not available but will be critical to future decisions about
management of this fishery and the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.