the book of Abstract for the 2016 ASFB OCS Conference
Transcription
the book of Abstract for the 2016 ASFB OCS Conference
1 Fish as proxies of ecological and environmental change Bronwyn Gillanders1 1. University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia Aquatic ecosystems have shifted from prehistoric baseline states due to anthropogenic and environmental change, but we generally lack long-term data to understand such change particularly in marine and freshwater systems. Fish are excellent, and largely underused proxies for elucidating the degree, direction and scale of shifts in aquatic ecosystems. Much qualitative and quantitative data can be derived from contemporary, archived and ancient sources. Archives of calcified structures along with modern day samples provide an alternative resource whereby long-term data can be generated in a relatively cheap and costeffective manner. Such samples provide data on biological, ecological and environmental baseline shifts. Several species will be used to show how the abundance, size and age structure, growth and environment inhabited by fish has changed over decadal and centennial time scales. Understanding biological responses to ecosystem change is useful for developing effective management and conservation strategies. 2 Are Sharks Smart? Using Brain Anatomy to Understand Cognitive Ability in Cartilaginous Fishes Kara Yopak1 1. University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia Selection for cognitive ability has been proposed as a key factor driving the evolution of larger brains and/or the brain structures associated with problem solving, social behavior and other cognitively demanding tasks. Major brain structures are often subject to different selection pressures, resulting in a significant degree of variation in brain size and complexity across vertebrates. Although cartilaginous fishes were previously thought to have relatively small brains with a limited behavioral repertoire, these fishes have brain/body ratios that are actually comparable to birds and mammals. This talk will explore major evolutionary patterns of brain organization in cartilaginous fishes, and how the relative development of major brain structures reflect an animal’s ecology, even in phylogenetically unrelated species that share certain lifestyle characteristics. I will elaborate on the novel techniques we are employing, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), 3D printing, and flow cytometry, to push the boundaries of evolutionary neuroscience and digital dissection, allowing for both traditional and non-invasive exploration of evolutionary questions. As a perfect ‘bioindicator,’ variation in brain development can allow us to make predictions about sensory and behavioral specialization across species, highlight transitions in life-history stages within a single species, and predict the fitness consequences of anthropogenic disturbances and environmental change. These data pave the way for predicting cognitive function and/or more complex behavioral repertoires in fishes, with implications for how “intelligence” has evolved across vertebrates. 3 Climate change and marine systems Gretta Pecl1 1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Hobart, TAS, Australia Over the years my research has shifted focus from examining biological and ecological processes at various temporal and spatial scales of organisation, towards seeking a more integrated socio-ecological understanding of natural systems. After an ARC post doc, several seemingly unrelated grants, projects and short-term appointments fortuitously laid the groundwork for the largerscale collaborative and interdisciplinary projects this presentation will highlight, all with a focus on climate change impacts and adaptation. Regional variation in the rate and magnitude of climate drivers offers considerable potential for rapidly changing regions to serve as ‘natural laboratories’ providing knowledge and tools for efficient and effective adaptation to meet some of the key challenges of associated with significant change. With colleagues, I examined our current capacity to use the ocean’s rapidly warming ocean regions for assessing climate change risks to inform longer-term adaptation strategies for sustainable natural resource use and management. Using metrics derived from across ecological, social, economic and governance domains, we developed a global ‘Marine Adaptation Index’ of our observational capacity for detection of climate change impacts, and our ability to act, learn, and moreover, to communicate and share advances in knowledge with to the broader community. We find substantial disparity among regions in the potential to detect biological impacts of climate change, and where change can be detected, in the proficiency for sharing new knowledge with the rest of the warming world. Additionally, through a global review of the socio-ecological impacts of ‘species on the move’, one of the most pervasive climate change impacts, we found that consideration of these effects were lacking in most global mitigation and adaptation strategies, including the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals. 4 Past, present, and future: physiological performance of coral reef fishes in a changing world Jodie Rummer1 1. ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia Globally, coral reefs are more at risk to human-induced stressors – such as climate change, including ocean warming, acidification, and altered water quality due to coastal development – now, than at any other time in recorded history. Dramatic effects on fish performance, distribution, and overall ecosystem health are predicted. While the success of the fishes over their long evolutionary history is thought to have hinged on key adaptations for maintaining oxygen transport and physiological performance under challenging conditions, whether they possess the necessary plasticity and/or adaptations to keep pace with the large-scale, rapid changes plaguing their habitats today is not known. Moreover, the coral reef fishes – in particular – diversified more recently on the geological time scale, with most species radiating within the last 23 million years, a period characterised by relatively stable environmental conditions. Evolving and existing under stable environmental conditions may heighten the vulnerability of coral reef fishes to the rapidly changing conditions coral reefs are facing today. By harnessing geographic gradients, such as the latitudinal thermal profile along the Great Barrier Reef, and local extreme environments, such as the volcanic CO2 seeps in the reefs of Papua New Guinea, as analogues for future change and integrating physiological, biochemical, and molecular techniques, the mechanisms that fish use to acclimate and adapt to these stressors can be identified. Such responses may become potential targets of natural selection and will determine which species and populations may be most at risk from climate change and other human-induced stressors and potentially priorities for conservation and management. 5 Chasing sharks to change management Michelle Heupel1 1. James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia Sharks have been exploited by man for centuries. They are used as a source of food and other products in most regions around the world. In recent decades the demand for shark products, especially meat and fins has resulted in the significant decline of many species caught by fisheries. The ability of sharks to sustain exploitation varies among species and depends on a range of biological and ecological characteristics. One of these key characteristics is movement, and it can be used to improve management of sharks. Acoustic telemetry has been used for decades to answer questions about where fish go and what they are doing in specific locations. However, links between movement ecology and management are not always apparent or explored. My research has focused on how movement ecology can be applied to conservation and management of shark populations. In this talk I will provide a number of case studies where I have used acoustic tracking data to help inform stock assessments, advise on marine protected area management, inform coastal water management and quantify cross-jurisdictional movements. The outcomes of this research will demonstrate the utility of acoustic telemetry to improving the management of sharks to help address the increasing conservation needs of many species and aid in their sustainable use. 6 Using biogeochemical tracers and sclerochronologies derived from fish otoliths to detect environmental change Gretchen Grammer1 1. SARDI Aquatic Sciences, West Beach, SA, Australia Biogeochemical tracers and sclerochronologies are used to answer many ecological questions that require linking organisms with the environment. Calcified hard parts of organisms that remain chemically inert after formation are particularly advantageous for extracting information (e.g. otoliths, shells, coral) on both the organism and the environment. My research has focused on otoliths (fish earstones) as an environmental proxy, since they contain both biogeochemical (i.e. radiocarbon and trace elements) and sclerochronological (i.e. growth) signals that reflect changes in aquatic systems. In my presentation, I will describe using these otolith-based chemical and growth signals to: (1) establish a radiocarbon record for upwelled waters in the southeastern Indian Ocean, and (2) describe physiological and environmental controls on otolith chemistry, using a novel modelling framework paired with a strong, local upwelling signal as an extrinsic cue. Consequently, after considering life history traits and physiological processes of a test species, otoliths carbonate records are an accessible mechanism that gives us the capacity to examine magnitude and direction of environmental change in both a spatial and temporal context. 7 The summer super-highway: migration of oceanic fishes between New Zealand and the tropical South Pacific islands Malcolm P Francis1, Clinton A J Duffy2, John Holdsworth3, Tim Sippel4 1. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand 2. Department of Conservation, Auckland, New Zealand 3. Blue Water Marine Research, Northland, New Zealand 4. National Marine Fisheries Service, La Jolla, California, USA Many large oceanic fishes migrate seasonally between New Zealand and subtropical or tropical waters of the south-west Pacific. Commercial catch data and tagging data were used to determine the timing and routes of the migrations of some of these species, providing new insights into their behaviour and habitats. Albacore tuna (Thunnus alalunga) and skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis) are caught around New Zealand in summer and return to the tropics in autumn. Other large tropical oceanic species such as whale shark (Rhincodon typus), oceanic whitetip shark (Carcharhinus longimanus), tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier), giant manta ray (Manta birostris), wahoo (Acanthocybium solandri), and yellowfin tuna (T. albacares) appear in northern North Island waters in summer, and are presumed to migrate between the tropical Pacific and New Zealand. Electronically tagged juvenile shortfin mako sharks (Isurus oxyrinchus), spinetail devilrays (Mobula japanica), striped marlin (Kajikia audax) and broadbill swordfish (Xiphias gladius) migrated from northern New Zealand to the tropical South Pacific and the Kermadec Ridge. Great white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) migrated from southern New Zealand to the tropical South Pacific and north-eastern Australia in winter–spring. The movement of large numbers of many species of large-bodied teleosts and chondrichthyans results in the seasonal transfer of large amounts of biomass between tropical and temperate waters. 8 Movement and behaviour of the endangered Maugean skate, Zearaja maugeana, in Macquarie Harbour, Tasmania Justin Bell1, Jeremy Lyle1, Jayson Semmens1, David Moreno1 1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Taroona, TAS, Australia Maugean skate (Zearaja maugeana) are a micro-endemic solely inhabiting two embayment’s in western Tasmania. The population in Bathurst Harbour appears to be small and although the Macquarie Harbour is relatively large it is subject to anthropogenic pressures including pollution from historic mining, salmonid aquaculture and gillnetting. As such, the present study investigated the spatial utilisation of Maugean skate in Macquarie Harbour to determine how the above pressures are likely to impact the population and formulate strategies to minimise them. Maugean skate are highly philopatric with 50% (core range) and 95% (home range) utilisation distributions generally <3km 2 and <10km2 respectively. The core range of only one skate overlapped with aquaculture leases, whereas the home range of most individuals did overlap but by <2km2 in all cases. Maugean skate displayed an affinity for waters 6–12m deep, which is likely dictated by water chemistry: shallow waters have low salinity and high temperature variability; deep waters are stable but have low dissolved oxygen; waters 6–12m deep are relatively stable. They also displayed diurnal variation in depth utilisation, presumably representing foraging behaviour. Direct interactions between Maugean skate and aquaculture operations were minimal. There may, however, be indirect interactions whereby organic wastes and reduce dissolved oxygen or increase dissolved nutrients. A number of changes were implemented to reduce impacts of gillnetting on Maugean skate as a result of this study; spatial closures limiting gillnetting mainly to waters <5m and the closure of areas important to the species are anticipated to greatly reduce captures. 9 Space utilisation, movement and behaviour of the spiny dogfish, Squalus acanthias, in Macquarie Harbour, Tasmania. David Moreno1, Justin Bell1, Jeremy Lyle1, Jayson Semmens1 1. IMAS, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tas, Australia Movement and spatial use provide insights into the behaviour of marine organisms which, in turn, enables their effective management. The spiny dogfish, Squalus acanthias, is a common, but vulnerable, shark inhabiting temperate continental shelves circumglobally, yet no information exists on the spatial dynamics of the species in Australia. Twenty-three S. acanthias were implanted with acoustic transmitters and monitored over 1.5 years using a passive acoustic array in Macquarie Harbour, Tasmania. Markov chains and Brownian bridge models were used to analyse the distribution of the species in the harbour. Both males and females displayed non-random site affinity, although the ranges of males changed seasonally. Social association indicated a varying degree of sexual segregation during winter, although patterns were not as clear as reported elsewhere. This represents the first example where the species displays phylopatric behaviour and does not undertake large scale movement. Both sexes are likely to be vulnerable to a variety of anthropogenic impacts within the Harbour and spatial management could be effectively implemented to nullify these impacts. The patterns of space use and behaviours observed in this study are unique for the species. By using random walk models and social networks, it is possible to gain a better understanding of the ways in which S. acanthias has adapted to a seemingly unfit environment. 10 State-space modelling methods for telemetry data: an application to surface-association behaviours in tropical tuna Joe Scutt Phillips1, Graham M Pilling2, Bruno Leroy2, Karen Evans3, Thomas Usu4, Kurt M Schaefer5, Chi H Lam6, Simon Nicol7 1. Climate Change Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2. Oceanic Fisheries Programme, Secretariat of the Pacific Community, Nouméa, New Caledonia 3. Ocean and Atmosphere Flagship, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 4. National Fisheries Authority, Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea 5. Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission, La Jolla, CA, USA 6. Large Pelagics Research Center, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA 7. Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences, Canberra, NSW, Australia Objectively classifying the behavioural time-series obtained from animal telemetry experiments requires factors such as temporal autocorrelation, varying time-scales, high-resolution data and underlying motivation to be considered. Hidden Markov models (HMMs), a form of state-space model, provide a useful classification tool for such data. HMMs assume that the observed patterns in movement data are generated by an unseen Markov process, which switches between an observation model of mixed distributions, each with different parameters. Here, we describe the design and numerical parameter estimation of these models for time-series of telemetry data, and present an example application examining the vertical behaviour of two species of tropical tuna. Tuna are known to reside near the surface around drifting and anchored fish aggregating devices (FADs) over periods of time that range from days to months. This residence makes them more vulnerable to fishers by increasing their horizontal encounter rate with vessels, and by causing a switch in vertical movement in favour of extended association with shallow waters. Estimating HMMs on 80 time-series from electronic tags implanted in bigeye (Thunnus obesus) and yellowfin (T. albacares) tuna at liberty in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean, we defined and objectively identified periods of surface-association that are typical in residence around floating object. The proportion of time exhibiting surface-association was generally lower than has been previously observed, although intraand inter-individual variability was high. Surface-association was clear and prolonged for many fish following release, but prior to recapture, surface-association events were non-existent or shorter than two days for 85% of bigeye and 74% of yellowfin. These results suggest the vertical component of floating-object association may be less important than short-term horizontal concentration when increasing probability of capture. Controlling the number of sets made on FADs may be a more effective management measure than the current approach of periodic closures. 11 Simulation-based evaluation of reserve network performance for a vulnerable deep-sea shark Ross Daley1, Alistair Hobday2, Jayson Semmens3 1. University of Tasmania, West Moonah, TAS, Australia 2. CSIRO, Hobart 3. University of Tasmania, HObart An individual-based simulation model of the movements of C. zeehaani was developed and applied to determine how long a depleted population would take to recover from 8% of un-fished numbers to a target of 20%. Individual movements were based on tracking results and simulated across closures and fished areas. Key uncertainties were length of the female breeding cycle, natural mortality and spatial variation in population density. The base case (three year cycle, 2% natural mortality) predicted recovery in 63 +- 3 years. Poor matching of closure locations to population density would delay recovery by 31.9 years. Sensitivity testing predicted the target would be reached 19.2 years earlier with a 2-year cycle or 16.5 years later with a fouryear cycle. If natural mortality were half the base case estimate then the target would be reached 13.5 years earlier or, significantly, if the natural mortality were doubled, recovery to the target would take 98.3 years longer. Improving handling practices for sharks or changing fishing methods on the continental shelf would not significantly affect the time for recovery but re-introducing trawling for orange roughy in deep waters would delay recovery by 45.9 years. Doubling or halving the size of a closure located where C. zeehaani is abundant would change recovery by +12.6 or -9.9 years but such changes have no significant effects where C. zeehaani are not abundant. The model can be used to evaluate the consequences of alternative management interventions and can be applied to other species with telemetry data. 12 Spatial orientation and magnetic alignment in Port Jackson sharks Sherrie L Chambers1, Catarina Vila Pouca1, Culum Brown1 1. Macquarie University, NSW, Australia Many animals are able to detect magnetic fields, which can influence behaviours such as foraging, predator evasion and longdistance navigation. Some marine species including turtles, cetaceans and elasmobranchs use magnetic ridges on the sea floor as a navigational tool for large-scale migrations, particularly in pelagic areas where there may be a lack of visual or olfactory cues. Additionally, both aquatic and terrestrial species have been shown to align themselves on a north-south axis whilst resting, although the purpose of this behaviour is not fully understood. Numerous shark species are known to be highly sensitive to magnets in a variety of contexts and some have demonstrated the use of magnetic fields in long distance navigation, however little is known about the use of a magnetic sense for spatial orientation at smaller scales. Here we investigate resting magnetic alignment in Port Jackson sharks to better understand the use of this magnetic sense in the context of spatial ecology. Captive juvenile sharks housed in circular tanks were photographed at intervals over a 16-day period, and resting orientation was compared before and after the addition of rare earth magnets to the tanks. We expect this study to provide a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying spatial orientation in Port Jackson sharks and their ability to detect and use magnetic cues to orient themselves and navigate habitats over small spatial scales. It may also provide insight into how they navigate over longer distances during their annual migration. 13 It works! Building a biophysical larval-fish dispersal model for the Great Barrier Reef based on empirical larval and adult behavior data…and testing it. Jeffrey M Leis1, Luciano B Mason2, Séverine Choukroun3, Michael Bode4, Geoffrey P Jones3, David Williamson3, Hugo Harrison3 1. University of Tasmania, Mt Nelson, TAS, Australia 2. Australian Maritime College, Launceston 3. James Cook University, Townsville 4. Melbourne University, Melbourne Larval dispersal models increasingly include larval behavior rather than assume passive larvae. However, few include a range of dispersal-relevant behaviors. Fewer still are tested. Many models over-generalize adult behaviors such as seasonal, lunar and diel timing or location of propagules release. Even if empirically-based behavior is included, variation among individual propagules is seldom included: rather, mean behavior is used, unrealistically constraining dispersal outcomes. Our model for Great Barrier Reef (GBR) fishes uses empirical measures of larva vertical distribution, swimming and orientation, and variation in and ontogeny of them. Only virtual larvae with sufficient swimming ability to overcome currents within ‘detection zones’ around reefs can settle. Propagules are released at empirically-determined times and places. Egg buoyancy is included. Hydrodynamics are a 3D development of the 2D James, et al. (2002) model. We tested three model scenario predictions (1- all empirical larval behavior; 2 - hypothetical SE swimming; and 3 - passive larvae) for a grouper (Plectropomus maculatus) in the southern GBR using genetic parentage techniques that matched recruits at the end of the 2011/12 spawning season with adults from spawning aggregations (Williamson et al. in review). Observed dispersal direction and distance best fit model Scenario 1 predictions. 14 First excursions into the ‘black box’ period of the blackspot seabream Pagellus bogaraveo: a missing piece of a deep-sea life cycle puzzle João Teixeira1, 2, Jorge Fontes3 1. Dept. of Oceanography and Fisheries, University of the Azores, Horta, Portugal 2. School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia 3. IMAR - Institute of Marine Research , Dept. of Oceanography and Fisheries, University of the Azores, Horta, Portugal The blackspot seabream, Pagellus bogaraveo, is ecologically and commercially one of the most important demersal species in the archipelago of the Azores. Its exploitation around the islands has increased due to the collapse of the fishery in continental waters. Despite the importance of recruitment processes in marine fisheries productivity, research has been focused primarily on the general aspects of the species’ biology and population dynamics, and as consequence little is known about the early life stages in the wild. My work focused on the understanding and characterization of its early life history, recruitment and postsettlement dynamics. To achieve these goals I used two methods: 1) underwater visual census, i.e., recruit counts, to investigate the temporal dynamics of recruitment, and 2) the analysis of juvenile otolith microstructure to investigate the early life history traits. Recruitment surveys were conducted monthly from April 2011 to May 2012 in Faial island, Azores. The results showed clear seasonal patterns of recruitment. Recruitment peaks were observed in April and May in two consecutive years, followed by a clear succession in the juvenile size structure over the following months culminating with the disappearance of bigger sized recruits from inshore waters during winter months. Otolith daily increment formation was validated which allowed us to retrospectively study the early life history of blackspot seabream. After interpreting the otolith microstructure and identifying the settlement mark, we were able to determine age, length-at-age relationship, pelagic larval duration (37.37±0.28 d), estimated size at settlement (13.50±0.17 mm), and average growth rates. Growth rates were significantly higher after settlement (16.82±0.47 mm d-1) compared to the larval stage (7.11±0.08 mm d-1). After back-calculating birth dates and grouping individuals by batch, comparison tests were used to investigate if there were significant differences in early life history traits among batches. 15 Consequences of kelp habitat modification for the recruitment of cryptic reef fish Victor Shelamoff1, Jeffrey T Wright1, Matthew J Cameron1, Cayne Layton1, Masayuki Tatsumi1, Craig R Johnson1 1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia Anthropogenic habitat alterations can have major impacts on the supply of new recruits to coastal fish populations. We aimed to determine the impact of kelp habitat patchiness and a reduction in canopy cover of Southern Australasia’s most dominant canopy forming kelp, Ecklonia radiata, on the recruitment of cryptic reef fish. We monitored larval recruitment across an array of 28 artificial reefs with transplanted Ecklonia, representing seven different reef patch sizes (from 0.12m2-6.68m2) crossed with four kelp densities (0, 4.1, 8.3 and 16.6 individuals/m 2). 95 precent of the 232 individuals recorded were either Forsterygion gymnotum or Pictiblennius tasmanianus recruits, with both species showing a similar pattern of prevalence across the reefs. Overall, recruitment was higher on smaller reefs than larger reefs, but there was only a weak indication of any kelp density effects. However, canopy density was significant for Pictiblennius, where reefs with the highest kelp density and zero kelp had higher recruitment than reefs supporting kelp at low-density. We discuss the potential role of various settlement and postsettlement processes in driving these patterns and the likelihood that reef size, at this spatial scale, will influence whether the presence of a kelp canopy has a positive or negative influence on recruitment. In a connected reef-scape, declining Ecklonia cover is likely to result in adverse consequences for cryptic species similar toForsterygion and Pictiblennius. However, small isolated reefs, especially those devoid of kelp, may form havens for larval settlers, but are unlikely to contribute meaningfully to adult populations. 16 Recruitment of Snapper, Chrysophrys auratus, in Port Phillip Bay depends on the match-mismatch of spawning period and production of preferred planktonic prey Gregory Jenkins1, Kerry Black1, Paul Hamer2, Andrew Longmore1 1. University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia 2. Fisheries Victoria, Queenscliff, Victoria, Australia Port Phillip Bay is the main spawning area for the Victorian western stock of Snapper, Chrysophrys auratus. The dynamics of the western stock are primarily driven by the recruitment success of Snapper in Port Phillip Bay. Recruitment success for Snapper in the bay is determined in the early larval stage. In this study we used a model of plankton dynamics in the bay to show that production of preferred prey for larvae (copepods) was determined by flows and associated nutrient inputs, and the effects of these on phytoplankton composition. Years of high larval survival and recruitment success occurred when production of preferred prey was high, and coincided with the early summer spawning period of Snapper. These years were characterised by moderate flows and nutrient inputs leading up to the spawning period that led to phytoplankton composition favouring flagellates. Years of very low flows and nutrient inputs led to an overall lack of plankton productivity and correspondingly poor larval survival and recruitment. Equally, years of high flows and nutrient inputs also led to poor recruitment because conditions in the plankton favoured diatoms that are a poorer food source for copepods, reducing production of these preferred prey. Overall, inputs of nutrients to Port Phillip Bay have a strong influence on the dynamics of the west Victorian Snapper stock, and the management of environmental flows and associated nutrients to the bay may be key factor in the ongoing sustainability of the fishery. 17 Early development of Eel-tailed catfish, Tandanus tandanus (Mitchell) (Teleostei: Plotosidae) from a subtropical Queensland stream, with validation of daily otolith increment formation Kate Burndred1, Bernie Cockayne1 1. DNRM Queensland, Bucasia, QLD, Australia Tandanus tandanus has recently experienced widespread population declines in eastern Australia; with some southern populations facing the risk of extinction, the management and conservation of Queensland populations should be considered a priority. To assist in clarifying the influence of changes to the natural environment on the reproductive ecology of T. tandanus, we investigated their early life history using naturally fertilised eggs and larvae from a wild population. Tandanus tandanus eggs ranged in diameter from 2.6 to 4.0 mm throughout development, and preservation of eggs in ethanol caused significant shrinkage (mean 18.9%). Hatching occurred between four to seven days (mean 5.29 days; 15.7 - 28.0°C). Larvae collected from nests ranged in age and standard length from one day old (mean SL 5.1 mm) to 16 days old (mean SL 15.3 mm); and SL was successfully modelled as a function of age. Larvae are likely to actively disperse from their nest at approximately 16 days old, and reach juvenility soon thereafter. Daily otolith increment formation was validated up to 28 days post-hatch; and sagittal otoliths were successfully used to develop an age-length relationship for larvae. These results can assist researchers in estimating the timing of critical recruitment events, and investigating how the species early life history is influenced by environmental conditions. 18 From the other side of the Pacific Ocean: environmental indicators and recruitment of Grenadiers in Chile and Australia Claudio Castillo-Jordan1, Paul Hamer2, Geoff Tuck3, Stewart Frusher4, Luis Cubillos5, Sean Tracey4 1. CSIRO-UTAS PhD Program in Quantitative Marine Science, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 2. Departament of Environment and Primary Industries , Queenscliff, Victoria, Australia 3. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Flagship , Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 4. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies , University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 5. COPAS Sur-Austral, Universidad de Concepcion, Concepcion, BioBio, Chile Grenadiers are an important commercial and ecosystem component of the demersal and mid water fisheries of Chile and Australia, locally known as Patagonian grenadier (Macruronus magellanicus) and blue grenadier (Macruronus novaezelandiae) respectively. The Chilean spawning area is located in the bifurcation of the Humboldt and Cape Horn currents, influenced by the west wind drift. For Australia, the spawning area is located off the west coast of Tasmania. Bayesian correlations and Bayes Factor Analysis indicate important relationships between the strength of a number of fish stocks and climate indices on both global and regional scales (such as the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO), Southern Annular Mode (SAM), the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI), sea surface temperature and wind). Similarly here, recruitment of grenadier stocks on both sides of the Pacific was found to be influenced by regional temperature and wind variables. Negative relationships with SOI were observed for Chilean and Australian populations, and Patagonian grenadier recruitment also showed associations with the time-series of SAM and IPO. Sea surface temperature and wind anomalies presented high correlations with recruitment for both populations. The highest correlations between the global and regional variables were in the summer - autumn period prior to the winter spawning season. It is possible that the global indices are producing a synchronous pattern of recruitment fluctuation for both populations, modified locally by regional variables. We discuss potential biophysical processes that could be responsible for the environment - recruitment correlations. 19 Should we sweat the trophodynamic details? Beth Fulton1 1. CSIRO, Hobart, TAS, Australia Trophodynamic ecosystem models are more than 30 years old and there is an increasing number of them, with a growing global coverage. Such models are being used to inform policy and management decision making. With this use comes a responsibility to make clear the implications of uncertainty. At the centre of ecosystem models is the food web. Understanding the true sensitivity of model dynamics to the form and parameterisation of these structures is fundamental for constraining uncertainty. Two decades of experience with such models indicates that parametric sensitivity differs from ecosystem to ecosystem, but structural sensitivity is a universal reality. The coming challenge for trophodynamic models is to remain robust to all forms of uncertainty while remaining flexible enough to capture large scale system shifts and biodiversity turn over under global change. 20 Using stable isotope data to advance marine food web modelling Stacey A McCormack1, 2, Jessica Melbourne-Thomas1, 2, 3, Rowan Trebilco1, 2, Julia L Blanchard1, Andrew Constable1, 2, 3 1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 2. Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 3. Australian Antarctic Division, Department of the Environment, Kingston, Tasmania, Australia Marine foodweb models are important tools for guiding sustainable management decisions and for evaluating the potential combined effects of harvesting and climate change. A key challenge is handling uncertainty in these models to ensure they provide robust predictions and management advice. Uncertainty is arguably highest for parameters relating to mid-trophic levels – in particular mesopelagic fish – for foodweb models in many regions, despite the fact that these groups are thought to play a central role in trophic energy transfer. Stable isotope signatures are an important data source for both parameterising these mid trophic levels, and for evaluating model skill. However the full potential of this data source has not been realised, and the implications of recent theoretical advances in the analysis and interpretation of stable isotope data have not yet been considered. We review the development and evaluation process for ecosystem models and assess the potential for incorporating stable isotope results into the parameterisation and evaluation of these models. This review provides an integrated framework for understanding how stable isotope data are used in both size- and species-based models, and clearly identifies priorities for future work. We conclude by discussing an example - a foodweb model under development for Prydz Bay and the southern Kerguelen Plateau region in the Indian Sector of the Southern Ocean- and consider the implications of our modelling work for evaluating the effects of climate change and fishing in the region. 21 Putting adaptive dynamics into food web models Romain Forestier1, Julia L Blanchard1, Elisabeth A Fulton2, Kirsty Nash1, Craig Johnson1 1. IMAS, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 2. CSIRO, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia Ecosystem models are increasingly being used to help support management and for predicting the ecosystem impacts of fishing and climate change. Many models represent detailed trophic interactions but these interactions can depend on the traits of individuals and species. Moreover, pressures such as fishing and climate change can affect the way in which traits are evolving in real systems. However, evolutionary processes are often ignored in ecosystem models. As a result, the consequences of evolutionary changes are not yet understood in an ecosystem context. To address this issue, food web models have begun to incorporate evolutionary processes using an approach called adaptive dynamics. This poster explains how to use adaptive dynamics within food web models, including key concepts, advantages and limitations. Future developments and applications of this framework will also be presented. 22 The guts of ecosystem models: are they still needed and can new methods assist? Catherine Bulman1, Andrew Revill1, Olly Berry1, Heidi Pethybridge1, Elizabeth Fulton1 1. CSIRO Ocean and Atmosphere, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia Dietary studies on common commercial and ecologically important fishes from the 1980s & 1990s form the basis of ecosystem models currently in use in southern Australia. These models are increasingly relied upon to provide guidance for fisheries management, particularly as ecosystem-based management ideals are embraced. Therefore it’s vitally important that the dietary data underpinning these models are kept current and accurate. Oceanographic conditions off eastern Australia are highly variable but now there are indications that oceanographic regimes might shift permanently as a result of climate change. Moreover, there is evidence that species distributions are changing, so we asked whether the diets of several fishes from the early studies have changed to an extent that we need to re-parametrise our models? We sampled ten commercially-caught species from the southeastern Australian shelf to determine their current diets and compare them mid-1990s diets. We used traditional stomach content analysis (visual) but we also established base-line data-sets for DNA meta-barcoding analyses of the stomach contents and for analyses of bulk and compound-specific amino acid stable isotopes, and fatty acids of the fish tissue samples. Diet compositions of some of the species had changed but for others the results were unclear, complicated by a high incidence of un-identifiable prey or by small sample sizes. DNA analyses increased prey identification in many cases, particularly where contents were unidentifiable, and identified new trophic links but not quantitatively. The biochemical markers provided insights into longer-term nutritional status, trophic positions and basal food web sources but were limited by small sample sizes. Potentially these newer techniques add greater depth of ecological understanding to ecosystem models and may eventually help to overcome the financial constraints of long-term sampling programs but visual stomach content analyses still remain invaluable to the trophic biologists and ecosystem modellers. 23 the role of cephalopods in ecosystems, the importance of modelling these species impact and ecology with groups of different habitats. Thibaut de la Chesnais1, 2, 3, Elizabeth Fulton1, Sean Tracey2, 3, Gretta Pecl2, 3 1. CSIRO, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 2. IMAS, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 3. UTAS, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia The evolution of ecosystems are often driven by key components or species. Because of their interaction with numerous elements of the food web and their high productivity, cephalopods may be a structuring component in marine ecosystems, as they have a key role in the transfer of nutrients through trophic levels. While catches of many stocks have declined or plateaued, the captures of cephalopods have strongly increased since the 70s. However, they are prey or predators of many other fisheries resources. Building a clear understanding of their role in ecosystems is thus a key challenge for the future of Ecosystem-Based tools for fisheries and marine resource management. We highlight the important lack of understanding of the impact of cephalopods on food webs around the world and the poor implementation of the cephalopod taxa in ecosystem models. The ecology of cephalopod, and thus their role in food webs, strongly depends on their habitat. The inclusion of cephalopod groups from different habitats in an ecosystem model of South Eastern Australia confirms this idea. On one hand, some oceanic squid species have a key role in the transfer of nutrients up trophic levels, acting as a link between neritic habitats and open waters, and between pelagic and benthic habitats. On the other hand, neritic species are more locally constrained and have a variable role in nutrient transfer. While most ecosystem models are built with one single group for ‘cephalopods’ or ‘squids’, these results prove that there is a need for investing in greater details the different cephalopod ecological groups to properly assess the various roles of key species with different habitats and ecology. This is a key point of improvement for ecosystem models and management tools as cephalopods are likely to adapt relatively fast to changing conditions, including climate change and fishing pressure. 24 Novel real-time PCR developed to assess DNA degradation in archived tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) skeletal material Einar E Nielsen1, Jess A.T. Morgan2, 3, Safia L Maher4, Janette Edson5, Maely Gauthier6, Julian G Pepperell7, Bonnie J Holmes4, Michael B Bennett4, Jennifer R Ovenden3 1. National Institute of Aquatic Resources , Technical University of Denmark, Vejlsøvej 39, Silkeborg, Denmark 2. Queensland Government, Dutton Park, QLD, Australia 3. Molecular Fisheries Laboratory, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia 4. School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia 5. Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia 6. QFAB Bioinformatics, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia 7. Pepperell Research & Consulting Pty Ltd, Caringbah, NSW, Australia Archived shark specimens from public and private repositories are highly valuable sources of DNA for retrospective genetic analysis. Here the usefulness of skeletal material as a source of DNA for temporal genetic studies is assessed. For cost effective processing, qPCR assays were developed to determine the quality of extracted DNA prior to downstream analysis. Independent assays were developed using SYBR fluorescence detection to amplify 100 and 200 base targets. Suitable single copy sequence targets in the tiger shark genome were found in the flanking sequences of microsatellite loci. An internal positive control (IPC) involving the addition of a synthetic oligonucleotide was also used to assess for PCR inhibition in the DNA extractions. Jaws yielded relatively high DNA quantity and quality, while large differences in yield were observed for vertebrae. Application of the method to 38 museum and private angler trophy specimens dating back to 1912 yielded sufficient DNA for downstream genetic analysis for 68% of the samples. No clear relationships between age of samples, DNA quality and quantity were observed, likely reflecting different preparation and storage methods for the trophies. This study demonstrates that archived shark jaws and vertebrae are potential high yield sources of DNA for genetic analysis. 25 Shark Share Global: a virtual tissue bank for collaborative elasmobranch research Madeline E Green1, 2, Lauren C Meyer2, 3 1. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. Shark Share Global, Collaborative Research Networks Ltd. , Hobart, TAS, Australia 3. Southern Shark Ecology Group, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA, Australia With more than a quarter of elasmobranchs considered endangered and another 47 per cent lacking basic biological data, there has never been a more crucial time for shark and ray scientists to work collaboratively and efficiently to understand the biology, ecology and physiology of elasmobranchs. Although opportunistic tissue collection occurs often in the field, in many cases not all potential samples are collected, samples are disposed of due to a lack of institutional storage, or they are left in freezers for potential future projects, which may not materialize. Additionally, sourcing samples for research projects remains challenging without broad global connections. Here, we propose an online database (Shark Share Global) to help overcome sampling inefficiencies and provide a user-friendly platform for sharing elasmobranch tissues. By creating a virtual global tissue bank, Shark Share Global is able to facilitate collaborative efforts, increasing multidisciplinary research without drastically increasing project costs. Here, we will introduce the database, its functionality and expected outcomes for the greater elasmobranch research community. 26 Effects of acoustic stimuli on the behaviour of wild and captive sharks Lucille Chapuis1, Laura A Ryan1, Kara E Yopak1, Robert D McCauley2, Nathan S Hart3, Shaun P Collin1 1. Neuroecology Group, School of Animal Biology and the Oceans Institute, The University of Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia 2. Centre for Marine Science and Technology, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia 3. Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia The effect of sounds on the behaviour of sharks has not been investigated since the 1970s. However, in a context where mitigation strategies are in high demand to counter fisheries pressure on sharks caught as bycatch, and negative interactions between sharks and humans, sound offers an advantage over other sensory stimuli, as it can spread in all direction quickly and further than any other sensory cue. We investigated the behavioural responses of wild and captive sharks to the playback of two different sounds: killer whale calls and a custom-made artificial sound. We also presented a combination of the sound with bright flashing (strobe) lights to explore the effect of multisensory cues. Great white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias), as well as seven species of benthopelagic reef sharks were targeted in the wild, while Port Jackson sharks (Heterodontus portusjacksoni) and epaulette sharks (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) were tested under controlled conditions in the laboratory. Our results show interspecific differences in the effect of underwater sounds on shark behaviour. We also found an enhanced adverse effect when strobe lights were used in combination with sound. We discuss our results within a neuroecological framework, in the context of anthropogenic noise and shark mitigation technologies. 27 Sperm storage in deep-sea holocephalans Brit Finucci1, Matthew R Dunn1, Emma Jones2, Jane Anderson3 1. Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand 2. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), Auckland, New Zealand 3. Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand Chimaeras are a globally distributed and yet relatively unknown subclass of fish within the Chondrichthyes. Many chimaeras are deep-sea, and are presumed to have reproductive parameters similar to other chondrichthyans that are characteristic of low productivity. Sperm storage has been reported in many chondrichthyans. The ability to store sperm is thought to be advantageous for deep-sea species, increasing reproductive efficiency in a resource-limited environment where sexual segregation is often present. To date, sperm storage has only been confirmed in the inshore chimaera (Callorhinchus milli) and based on this observation, is presumed to be widespread across the holocephalans. Specimens of longnose spookfish (Harriotta raleighana), Pacific spookfish (Rhinochimaera pacifica), and brown chimaera (Chimaera carophila) were collected from research trawl surveys and commercial vessels around New Zealand at depths between 400 and 1300 m. Using histological techniques and transmission electron microscopy, sperm storage tubules (SSTs) and sperm bundles were identified in the terminal zone of the oviducal gland of mature individuals. SSTs were identified in both macroscopically active and resting stages. A large, gelatinous mass, consistent with a sperm plug, was also found in the accessory genital gland of mature H. raleighana and R. pacifica. These results contribute to the ecological understanding of a relatively unknown and unique group of deep-sea animals. 28 Seaweed-associated fish communities are shaped by meadow quality and seascape context Joshua van Lier1, Christopher Fulton1 1. The Australian National University, Turner, Canberra, ACT, Australia Seascape variables (e.g., patch size, isolation, distance to other habitats) can interact with the local species pool to shape the composition of fish communities within patch habitats. Recent work on mesohabitats such as coral reefs, mangroves and seagrass beds have found that both within-patch conditions (e.g., habitat complexity, predator abundance) and spatial context (e.g., connectivity, isolation) can be important predictors for fish community structure. Similar understanding is needed for seaweed meadow patch networks, which have recently been demonstrated to be key nurseries for tropical fishes. We explored how patch quality (e.g., patch size, microhabitat structure) and seascape context (e.g., distance to next patch, distance to coral reef) may help explain the distribution and abundance of labrid fishes within a 6 km 2 section of the World Heritage Ningaloo Marine Park. In situ visual surveys of fish and habitat, in conjunction with on-ground GPS mapping for 31 patches revealed that key measures of microhabitat complexity interact with the spatial context of a seaweed meadow to provide key predictors for the diversity and abundance of fish species and functional groups. Our results suggest that spatial management and conservation approaches need to take account of both patch habitat quality and positioning in the seascape in order to encompass the local species pool in a given area of concern. 29 Pump Screen Technology Uptake in Inland NSW – Major Projects David Ward1 1. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Calala, NSW, Australia The rivers of inland New South Wales (NSW) face a range of pressures with regards to the management of aquatic habitat. Land management issues have a crucial role in influencing the health of aquatic ecosystems. Inland NSW is currently under increasing pressure from resource development for coal seam gas, coal and other extractive industries. These resource development projects often involve large scale water extraction requirements from both groundwater and surface water sources. The application of pump screening technology for State Significant Development (Major) Projects within inland NSW has presented NSW Department of Primary Industries with a range of legislative and logistical challenges to ensure there is no negative impact on native fish populations. Incorporation of pump screen technology has generally been limited to large town water supply projects and major extractive resource projects. Incorporating targeted and comprehensive aquatic environmental monitoring into these projects is a critical aspect of project development, particularly if threatened species, populations or ecological communities are present. In addition, these monitoring programs can assist in the development of pump screen criteria for wider application. 30 Species-specific: divergence in reef shark movement patterns Michelle Heupel1, Mario Espinoza2, Elodie J.I. Ledee3, Andrew Tobin3, Colin Simpfendorfer3 1. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, QLD 2. Universidad de Costa Rica, San José, Costa Rica 3. James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia Understanding the movement patterns of predators is crucial to defining their role in ecosystems as well as developing effective management and conservation policies. Reef associated sharks are often considered to have similar habitat requirements and movement patterns. Here we examined the long-term presence and movements of several species of reef-associated sharks in the central and southern Great Barrier Reef. Long-term acoustic telemetry data collected from grey reef, blacktip reef, whitetip reef, weasel, silvertip, tiger and bull sharks over a five year period revealed complex movement patterns that vary by size, sex, species and habitat type. Home range and network analyses demonstrated that the amount of space used and location of home ranges varied among species and locations. Despite their similar sizes, grey reef, blacktip reef, whitetip reef and weasel sharks moved and used space differently. These results suggest biological needs may be key drivers of reef shark movement and distribution. The differences observed in reef shark movement patterns are relevant to management of reef shark populations as concerns around these species increase within and beyond the Great Barrier Reef. 31 Spatial interactions and long-term coexistence of sharks in a tropical coastal embayment Samantha Munroe1, Michelle Heupel2, Andrew Chin3, Danielle Knip3, Colin Simpfendorfer3 1. Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, QLD, Australia 2. Australian Institute of Marine Science Townsville, Townsville, QLD, Australia 3. James Cook University, Townsville , QLD, Australia Diverse shark assemblages have been documented in coastal areas across the globe, however few studies have investigated the long-term spatial interactions of shark communities. This study examined the spatial interactions of six co-occurring shark species in a tropical embayment using passive acoustic telemetry. Eighty-two sharks were tracked in Cleveland Bay, Queensland between 2008 and 2014: The Australian sharpnose shark Rhizoprionodon taylori (8), the spottail shark Carcharhinus sorrah (16), the creekwhaler C. fitzroyensis (8), the pigeye shark C. amboinensis (23), the blacktip reef shark C. melanopterus (17), and the Australian blacktip shark, C. tilstoni (10). Monthly activity space size was similar between species, however annual results showed that the smallest species, R. taylori, had the largest activity space. These results were surprising as they indicated body size had a limited influence on the space use patterns of the collective assemblage. Spatial overlap analysis revealed species experienced some overlap at the extent of their range; however most species exhibited low core activity space overlap. Low core overlap suggested populations had unique resource preferences or may have avoided each other to limit competition. The exception was C. amboinensis, C. fitzroyensis, and C. tilstoni, which had high spatial overlap. Dietary data showed these species likely target different prey. As high spatial overlap could result in unsustainable competition, our results suggest these species limit competition with dietary rather than spatial partitioning. Our study indicates multiple potential mechanisms enable long-term coexistence of shark species. 32 Spatial and temporal patterns of habitat use by six shark species in inshore environment Elodie J.I. Ledee1, Michelle R. Heupel1, 2, Andrew Chin1, 2, Samantha Munroe3, Colin Simpfendorfer1 1. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture & College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, Quensland, Australia 2. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, Queensland, Australia 3. Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia Passive acoustic monitoring was used to track the movements of six shark species (Australian sharpnose, blacktip reef, common blacktip, creek whaler, pigeye and spottail sharks) in Cleveland Bay, Queensland, from 2012 to 2015. Acoustic monitoring allowed long-term observation of behaviour and movement via a network of moored listening stations recording the presence of tagged animals. Network analysis is a novel and alternative approach to conventional habitat use analysis that treats habitat types as network nodes and analyses spatial and temporal habitat use patterns based on frequency of use of a node by an individual during a specific period. Cleveland Bay has diverse habitat types including coral reef, sand banks, intertidal mud-flats, sea-grass beds and mangrove forest. Preliminary results show the number of habitat types used was significantly different between species, with pigeye and spottail sharks using on average more habitats (mean ~ 3.9) than blacktip reef shark (mean ~ 2.7). Furthermore, habitat segregation was found between species; for example, sea-grass beds were the most important habitat for Australian sharpnose shark whereas blacktip reef shark predominantly used inshore reefs throughout the monitoring period. Further spatial and temporal analyses are required to confirm that Australian sharpnose, common blacktip and creek whaler sharks, which were predominantly using sea-grass beds, were spatially and temporally co-occurring. These results highlight unique behaviours between co-occurring species, and enhance our understanding of animal interactions in inshore habitats to help provide guidance for their management. 33 Empirical evidence of a large Scalloped Hammerhead Shark (Sphyrna lewini) nursery ground in the Rewa Delta, Fiji Amandine D Marie1, Cara Miller1, Celso Cawich1, Susanna Piovano1, Ciro Rico1 1. the University of South Pacific, Suva, Fiji At least three sharks die every second worldwide due to bycatch, targeted fishing and/or the destruction of their habitats. The Scalloped Hammerhead Shark (SHS, Sphyrna lewini) is among the most globally threatened shark species (listed as endangered in the IUCN Red List) and has recently being included in the Appendix II of CITES. The purpose of this study is to present empirical evidence of the existence of a SHS nursery in the Rewa Delta, Fiji. A total of 1217 captures (including 107 recaptures) were made from September 2014 to March 2016 by using gill nets. A total of 952 individuals (+ 102 recaptures) were captured during the field surveys and an additional total of 163 SHS were captured by local fishermen as by-catch (five of these 163 individuals were previously tagged during our study). According to the definition of a shark nursery area proposed by Heupel et al. (2007), our results unambiguously confirmed that the Rewa Delta is a nursery ground for scalloped hammerhead sharks because the following conditions were met: 1) the abundance of SHS is higher in the nursery ground than its surroundings, 2) there is site fidelity of SHS neonate and young of the year in the Rewa Delta and, 3) a long term presence of SHS in the Rewa Delta was observed. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest and probably the most important nursery ground for the species ever documented in the tropical South Pacific Ocean. 34 The ups and downs of the tiger shark – an up-close view of their behaviour Samantha Andrzejaczek1, 2, Adrian C Gleiss3, Charitha B Pattiaratchi 1, Taylor K Chapple4, Mark G Meekan2 1. School of Environmental Systems Engineering , University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia 2. Australian Institute of Marine Science , Crawley, WA, Australia 3. Centre for Fish and Fisheries, Murdoch University, Murdoch, Western Australia, Australia 4. Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University, Pacific Grove, CA, USA Tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier) are a keystone predator in the food chains of many tropical reef systems worldwide. Recently, cameras deployed on these sharks have provided new insights into their behaviour, including feeding on a wide variety of prey species and continuous cycles of ascent and descent through the water column. Here, we deployed CATS camera and diary tags on tiger sharks at Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia in order to investigate hunting strategies and the drivers of movement patterns. These tags were clamped to the dorsal fin and recorded both physical parameters such as depth and temperature, and, through the use of accelerometers, in situ measurements of animal trajectory and locomotion, which enabled calculation of dive geometry and swimming energetics. These data were compared with behaviours recorded simultaneously by video cameras. To date, our tags have recorded a number of predator-prey interactions, swimming strategies as well as recovery from the process of tag application. Our data have demonstrated the suitability and effectiveness of these tags as a means to link the processes of locomotion and behaviour of these animals. 35 An evaluation of long-term monitoring of larval fish in eastern Australia James A Smith1, Iain M Suthers1, Ana Lara-Lopez2, Anthony J Richardson3, Kerrie Swadling4, Tim Ward5, Paul van Ruth5, Jason D Everett1 1. University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2. Integrated Marine Observing System, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 3. CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, Brisbane, QLD, Australia 4. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 5. South Australian Research and Development Institute, Adelaide, SA, Australia Regular monitoring of larval fish began in 2014-2015 at five locations in the Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) National Reference Station (NRS) network. We evaluated the value of this monitoring for detecting spatial and temporal trends in the distribution and spawning of key taxa, and trends in the larval fish community. We focused on 3 East coast NRS (North Stradbroke Island, Port Hacking, and Maria Island) due to the availability of comparable historical larval fish data for this region. Historical data from 7 surveys (spanning 1983-2015) was used to provide long-term context to help evaluate the value of longterm larval fish monitoring at NRS. We found that the abundance of larval fish is high variable in time and space, which makes trend detection difficult. A power analysis predicts that this monitoring would need to occur for at least 20 years to detect moderate declines in the larval abundance of key taxa, and > 50 years for many taxa. There was a clear latitudinal trend in the larval fish community, but we found evidence that this gradient has shifted recently, in part due to poleward shift in the spawning of some temperate species. We conclude that larval fish monitoring is a valuable fishery-independent data source for identifying changes in the marine environment, and the current NRS monitoring will likely be useful for identifying large range shifts, changes in phenology, and trends in abundance for some taxa, if monitoring is continued over the long term. 36 Comparison of fish larvae communities in a young versus an old frontal eddy of the East Australian Current in relation to possible source waters Tony Miskiewicz1, Valquaria Garcia2, Hayden Schilling3, Derrick Cruz3, Steven Hawes4, Jason Everett3, Iain Suthers3 1. Wollongong City Council, Wollongong, NSW, Australia 2. School of Aquaculture, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil 3. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Science, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia 4. School of Biological Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia Frontal eddies, which are generated by current shear along the edge of ocean boundary currents may entrain larval fish from shelf waters and contribute to the connectivity and recruitment of coastal populations. Larval fish assemblages were sampled from two frontal eddies of the East Australian Current and their expected source waters on the shelf. The smaller, younger eddy, located 150 km offshore, was characterised by distinctive coastal water properties of lower temperature (<20°C) and salinity, and higher abundances of fish larvae of coastal shelf families and estuarine taxa of commercial importance. However when the putative, coastal source waters of this eddy were sampled, the region was found to be swept over by the East Australian Current, and had similar water properties and a family composition, dominated by oceanic taxa, similar to a larger northern frontal eddy that was formed 4 weeks earlier. Shelf taxa were evident in the putative coastal source waters of the older eddy, but these were no longer evident in the older eddy. The larval fish communities caught at each location were found to only reflect the water characteristics of the previous few weeks. Myctophidae composed 48% of the overall community, followed by Notosudidae (10%), Labridae (3.5%) and Phosichthyidae (3.35%). Both factors, location and depth, were showed significant variation in the larval fish community composition. Myctophidae and Labridae were distributed across all sites. The younger eddy was characterized by higher abundances of coastal families such as Acropomatidae, Carangidae, Serranidae and Gonorhynchidae. The younger eddy source water site and the older northern eddy locations were dominated byoceanic families (Notosudidae, Phosicthyidae, Howellidae and Gonostomatidae). Clupeidae and Engraulidae larvae were more common at the older northern eddy source water location. In relation to depth distribution, Myctophidae, Notosudidae and Labridae were found across all depths. Acropomatidae were more representative of the deeper strata and Gonorhynchidae and Scomberesocidae dominant in the surface layer. Clupeidae and Engraulidae were more abundant in the surface and the upper mixed layer (5-50m) than the 50-100m strata. Our study revealed the difficulties due to ocean dynamics of determining the potential significance of frontal eddies as offshore nursery areas. 37 Freshwater fish spawning linked to both wet and dry season flows in the wet-dry tropics of northern Australia Alison King1, Catherine Doidge1, Duncan Buckle1 1. Research Institute for Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT, Australia The rivers of the wet-dry tropics in northern Australia support a high diversity and abundance of freshwater fish. Previous studies, both in Australia and throughout the world, have highlighted the importance of the wet season as a significant period for fish spawning and recruitment in tropical rivers. But few studies have examined larval abundance across seasons. We conducted a pilot study to determine the spatial and temporal variability of spawning across one hydrological cycle (1 year) in the Daly River, Northern Territory, Australia. Fish spawning occurred throughout the year, with the composition of the larval assemblage varying considerably. The highest larval species diversity occurred in the wet season high-flow period, but 10 species were also collected during the low-flow dry season. Some species spawned throughout the entire year, while others preferentially spawned in either the wet or dry seasons. Spatial variability between sites was also evident in the dry season. This preliminary study highlights that the dry season, low-flow period may have been underestimated as an important spawning and recruitment period for freshwater fishes in tropical rivers. This finding has important implications for predicting the effects of increasing dry season water extraction on freshwater fishes of the wet-dry tropics. 38 Landscape-scale life-history gradients in New Zealand freshwater Galaxias spp. Gerry Closs1, Jason Augspurger1, Peter Jones1 1. Department of Zoology, University of Otago, DUNEDIN, New Zealand Intra- and inter-specific variation can reveal ecological mechanisms and evolutionary steps leading to the evolution of new species. We tested the hypothesis that egg size and fecundity would vary across an altitude gradient (i) within the widely distributed Galaxias vulgaris and (ii) between G. vulgaris and two other closely related species. In Galaxias vulgaris, egg size increased and fecundity decreased with increasing altitude. Inter-specific egg size and fecundity of the three species also varied across an altitude gradient, with egg size increasing and fecundity decreasing as altitude increased. Galaxias paucispondylus, a high altitude species compared to the other two species, had the largest mean egg size and lowest fecundity. In contrast, mean egg size and fecundity of lower altitude G. brevipinnis was an order of magnitude higher and lower respectively than G. paucispondylus. Mean egg size and fecundity of G. vulgaris was intermediate relative to the other species, reflecting a distribution that broadly spans the altitudinal gap between the G. paucispondylus and G. brevipinnis. Our results suggest that egg/ fecundity trait variation is driven by differences in the productivity of larval rearing habitat. High altitude (low productivity) environments require large larvae (and therefore eggs), but at the cost of maternal fecundity. At lower altitudes (higher productivity), maternal fitness is maximised by increasing fecundity by reducing egg size to the detriment of larval fitness. Our results highlight how egg size-fecundity trade-offs could facilitate the evolution of species at either end of the egg size-fecundity life history spectrum. 39 Spawning and recruitment of fish in response to environmental watering in the lower Lachlan River system. Rhian Clear1, Ben Broadhurst1, Fiona Dyer1 1. Institute for Applied Ecology, University of Canberra, Bruce, ACT A Long Term Intervention Monitoring (LTIM) program has been established to monitor and evaluate the ecological responses to Commonwealth environmental watering in seven river systems across the Murray Darling Basin. One of the selected areas for the program was the lower Lachlan River system. To determine the effect of environmental flows on fish spawning and recruitment, larval fish were sampled fortnightly from mid-October to mid-December in 2014 and 2015, using drift nets and light traps at three sites on the Lachlan River in the Hillston area, NSW. Flow and environmental conditions were markedly different over the two years of monitoring. In August 2014 a flow of 5 GL of tributary inflows were protected within the river channel to provide cues for native fish to migrate and spawn as well as contribute to habitat access, fish condition, spawning and larval survival. In August – December 2015 a large translucent event (72 GL) was combined with releases of 25 GL to improve ecological conditions and a subsequent 9.4 GL which specifically targeted golden perch movement and spawning. A total of 536 and 1141 larval fish were captured in 2014 and 2015, respectively, across the five sampling events. Five native species (Murray cod, Flat-headed gudgeon, Carp gudgeon, Australian smelt, Eel-tailed catfish) and two alien fish species (Eastern gambusia and Carp) were captured. Spawning of equilibrium and opportunistic species were observed in both years, however there was no evidence of spawning of periodic species. Opportunities for initiating spawning in periodic species are being explored and may be related to a combination of the condition and structure of the population, the timing of flow releases, and the prevailing environmental conditions. 40 An environmental DNA based method for monitoring spawning activity: A case study using the endangered Macquarie Perch (Macquaria Australasica) Jonas Bylemans1, Elise Furlan1, Christopher M Hardy2, Prudence McGuffie3, 1, Mark Lintermans1, Dianne Gleeson1 1. Institute for Applied Ecology, University of Canberra, Bruce, ACT, Australia 2. CSIRO Land and Water, CSIRO, Canberra, ACT, Australia 3. Department of Primary Industries, NSW Government, Batemansbay, NSW, Australia Determining the time and location of reproduction for threatened species is critical to design and evaluate management actions. The current available methods for monitoring reproduction in aquatic species are often biased, costly, time intensive and sometimes require lethal sampling. Here we present an environmental DNA (eDNA) based methodology for monitoring spawning activity, which can overcome these constraints. During spawning the mass release of spermatozoa, which contain few mitochondria and highly protected nuclear DNA, forms a major source of eDNA. Thus, we hypothesized that the relative abundance of mitochondrial and nuclear eDNA will change during reproductive events. Through an experimental and field-based study, focusing on the endangered Macquarie perch, we were able to show that both target fragments are equally abundant outside of the reproductive period. However, after the release of spermatozoa a strong increase in nuclear eDNA was observed while mitochondrial eDNA concentration only increased moderately. Hence, the changes in the ratio between nuclear and mitochondrial eDNA can be indicative of recent spawning activity and can be used to monitor reproductive activity in species relying on external fertilization. 41 Gravid spot: A surrogate for predicting progress of embryonic development and reproductive output in a live bearing fish (Gambusia holbrooki) Lokman Norazmi1, John Purser1, Jawahar Patil2, 3 1. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies,, University of Tasmania, Launceston, Tasmania, Australia 2. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies,, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 3. Inland Fisheries Service, New Norfolk, Tasmania, Australia Brooding females of livebearing fish can be identified by the presence of the gravid spot; a dark pigmented spot located at a lateral and cranial position to the anal/genital pore. However, its use to predict embryonic development and clutch size remains unexplored. This study quantified visual attributes (intensity and size) of the gravid spot in relation to key features of internal embryonic development and clutch size in Gambusia holbrooki, a pest fish of concern to Australia. Observations show that the colour of the gravid spot arises from progressive melanisation on the surface of the ovarian sac. As predicted, the intensity and size of the gravid spot were closely linked with both developmental stage and clutch size, suggesting their reliable use as external surrogates. This reliability was harnessed to design and document downstream experiments on gestation, parturition and hormonal sex reversal. The gestation period was very sensitive to a small change in temperature—significantly longer (F=364.58; df=1,48; P<0.05) when reared at 23°C (897±43.93 degree days) compared to 25 °C (715±48.5 degree days). However, temperature did not have significant impact (P>0.05) on clutch size or diel timing of parturition which occurs predominantly in the morning (0900-1100h under 16:8h light: dark photoperiod, time on 0600h). The first-ever description on the birth posture of G. holbrooki fry (progenies) during parturition where the tail of the fry emerged first with a few exceptions of head-first, twin and premature births, was also documented. The reproducibility and utility of the relationships imply that they are also relevant to management of wild populations such as for stock assessment, monitoring environmental impacts, and control of pest populations among others. The observed embryonic superfetation and its relevance to reproductive adaptation and management will also be discussed. 42 The importance of habitat structural complexity in the assessment of marine reserve performance Matt Rees1, Andy Davis1, Alan Jordan2, Michelle Linklater3, Nathan Knott4 1. Biological Sciences, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, Australia 2. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Nelson Bay, NSW 3. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW 4. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Huskisson, NSW The importance of habitat structural complexity in the assessment and understanding of Marine Protected Area (MPA) performance remains unresolved. Habitat structural complexity is known be an important driver of the abundance and diversity of fishes so therefore may confound spatial comparisons between reserves and non-reserves. This is specially the case when assessments of MPA effectiveness involve non-random allocation of treatments or low replication. Here we present an assessment of the performance of marine reserves in the Lord Howe Marine Park (LHIMP), NSW, Australia while accounting for underlying variation in habitat structural complexity. The LHIMP comprises of two marine reserves where fishing is prohibited, surrounded by habitat protection zones that allow recreational fishing and charter boat fishing operations. High resolution multi-beam surveys in the LHIMP have revealed substantial variation in habitat structural complexity across all zones. As a result, the LHIMP provides an ideal opportunity to investigate the importance of how habitat structural complexity influences the assessment of MPAs. In this study we tested the performance of LHIMP by comparing the abundance of Seriola lalandi (Yellowtail Kingfish) and Carcharhinus galapagensis (Galapagos Whalers) between reserves and non-reserves while accounting for habitat structural complexity. We found that Seriola lalandi abundance was significantly greater in reserves compared to non-reserves but only at sites with high structural complexity. In contrast, the abundance of Carcharhinus galapagensis did not differ between reserves and non-reserves nor with habitat structural complexity. We propose that the disparity in results is due to differences in fishing pressure and habitat preferences between the two taxa. Carcharhinus galapagensis is a pelagic species displaying little affinity to seafloor habitats and is not intentionally targeted by fishers. In comparison, Seriola lalandi displays a stronger tie to benthic habitats and is heavily exploited by fishers. Our findings demonstrate that habitat structural complexity is important to consider when testing MPA performance. We suggest that future studies assessing MPA performance to incorporate measures of habitat variability if the data is available. 43 Acute climate-mediated disturbances – the defining role in structuring coral reef futures? Anna Cresswell1, Mick Haywood2, Damian Thomson2, Tim Langlois3, Gary Kendrick3 1. CSIRO/ University of Western Australia, City Beach, WA, Australia 2. CSIRO, Perth, Western Australia, Australia 3. Plant Biology, University of Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia Key theories in ecology surround the concepts of equilibrium in ecosystems and the role of disturbances in driving ecosystem function and diversity. Climate change brings not only chronic stressors to reef ecosystems, such as temperature rise and ocean acidification, it is also associated with predictions of increased acute disturbance events: cyclones/severe storms, heat waves, and flooding. This is all overlain with ever increasing human impacts. The degree to which acute natural disturbances will shape ecosystems compared, or in synergy with, chronic anthropogenic and environmental stressors is unknown. Corals are among the greatest marine ecosystem engineers: providing habitat, protection and food and altering physio-chemical conditions for associated reef fauna. Understanding of the reliance of key fauna on the health and composition of the benthos is necessary if we are to develop targeted conservation strategies to promote ecosystem resilience. Changes in the benthos are arguably the most evident and quantifiable. Impacts to reef fishes are more difficult to measure, having higher short term variability and may be a direct result of disturbances or an indirect result facilitated through ecosystem processes and associations. Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia, has been subject to multiple acute disturbances over the last decade, including cyclones, a heatwave and a flood. Due to a relative lack of local anthropogenic pressures in the global coral reef context, studies of the role of acute disturbances at Ningaloo Reef are comparatively free of confounding drivers. Here I report on documented changes in benthic and fishes assemblages over a decade and report on how trophic and functional associations may drive indirect impacts following disturbances. With improved understanding of the processes driving indirect disturbance impacts to reef associated fauna – juvenile fishes, obligate corallivores, key herbivorous groups and important commercial fishes – management strategies may target specific ecosystem functions to promote resilience of whole ecosystems. 44 Ecoregionalization of coral reef fish in New Caledonia using gradient forest modeling. Jessica Garcia1, Thomas Bockel1, Liliane Caprentier1, Dominique Pelletier1 1. IFREMER, IFREMER - French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea, NOUMEA, FRANCE Beta diversity is a key concept for our understanding of ecosystem dynamics. It is broadly used to describe turnover in species composition thought environmental gradient at different spatial and temporal scales. In this study, we propose to define spatially homogeneous geographical units of beta diversity at the New Caledonia (17-24° S, 158-172° W) scale as well as the relative importance of spatial environmental factors (physical, chemical and habitat) on fish species turnover. By determining three hierarchical spatial scales, we evaluate the impact of the choice of spatial scales on the order of importance of these factors. Fish abundance and habitat data were collected with unbaited rotative underwater video (STAVIRO). We used a gradient forest modeling and clustering method (ssi) to predict the turnover in fish assemblages across environmental gradients. We delimited 8 distinct ecoregions in the New Caledonia. The factors that better explained fish beta-diversity were phosphate, salinity, temperature, nitrates and silicates. We showed that the order of importance of each environmental factor changed according to the spatial scale. At the local scale, living coral cover differed between sampling locations and reflected the human pressure on the local ecosystem. Physical and chemical factors influenced the turnover of fish assemblage for healthy local ecosystem. For degraded ecosystem, habitat was the most important factor to explain fish beta diversity. For healthy and isolated ecosystems where human pressure remains weak, phosphates and nitrates are the main drivers of fish diversity. We hypothesize that the natural eutrophication provided by the nutrient enrichments from the avifauna may have positive effect on the marine ecosystem. However, the hierarchical importance of environmental factors (physical, chemical and local habitat) differed according to the local degree of health for the ecosystem considered. Contrary to common believes, our study demonstrate that moderate eutrophication can have benefit effects on fish diversity for healthy ecosystems due to a more efficient absorption process. 45 Microhabitat specialisation underpins coral-seaweed niche segregation in tropical reef fishes Lucy N Wenger1, Joshua van Lier1, Christopher J Fulton1 1. The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT Seaweed meadows are a significant feature of tropical coastlines, yet these habitats are only just beginning to be recognised as key parts of tropical marine ecosystems. While recent research has revealed that numerous reef-associated fishes may be dependent on seaweed meadows at some stages of their life history, we are yet to understand the extent to which these fishes specialise towards a seaweed existence, and the traits that may be associated with this type of habitat specialisation. For my Honours research, I studied the Macropharyngodon-Xenojulis phylogroup of wrasses to explore the extent to which closely- related reef fishes may specialise, and therefore, depend upon coral and/or seaweed habitats. Using a combination of published and new data, I found that this related group of species had a distinct affiliation with either seaweed or corals. Although there was some overlap apparent at the mesohabitat scale, microhabitat preferences revealed strong ecological segregation via the association of each species with either hard corals (Macropharyngodon) or canopy-forming seaweeds (Xenojulis). Moreover, foraging and dietary preferences also differed according to microhabitat, with Macropharyngodon generally consuming more foraminifera from sand-pavement microhabitats, while Xenojulis gleaned their diverse epibiont prey from canopy-forming seaweeds. Our findings suggest the potential for strong microhabitat specialisation and dependency on both seaweed and coral habitats, which means these should be conserved and managed as equally important components of tropical marine ecosystems. 46 Grey reef shark dependence to habitat characteristics and community composition in the central GBR Stacy L Bierwagen1, Colin Simpfendorfer1, Michelle Heupel 1. James Cook University, Townsville City, QLD, Australia Sharks play a vital role in the functioning of marine ecosystems and, in coral reef habitats, have come under increasing pressure from human activity. Management of coral reefs often uses zoning and protected areas to boost productivity to sites subject to disturbance. These measures are often complex and devoid of long-term data crucial in determining success of marine reserve design. Studies investigating efficacy of a protected area are often species-specific and vary based on habitat composition and influencing physical factors. While animal movement is a significant aspect in defining boundaries of a reserve, simplistic mechanisms of predator-prey interactions are often overlooked. Prey selection can be a pertinent component in outlining habitat and space use of a species and presently little data are available linking abundance of predators to abundance of prey. Reef sharks that tend to be site-attached carry energetic capacities with potential to span larger distances than other siteattached reef fish. With changing climate conditions and persistent resource exploitation, it is necessary to determine factors that influence residency of mobile species and whether degraded reefs can support an abundance of predators. Using an ecosystem-based approach, sources of productivity in reef communities were examined from 2006-2014 using long-term fish, benthic, and environmental monitoring data from the Australian Institute of Marine Science for four reefs in the central Great Barrier Reef. This data was modeled against residency data collected from telemetry studies of grey reef sharks from 2011-2013. Preliminary results indicate fine-scale variabilty in abundance and species-richness by site where specific habitats may be more resilient to changing conditions. Sources of productivity for grey reef sharks such as piscivores are severely depleted since 2006 surveys and require further analysis to determine whether lower prey abundance has an effect on residency to reefs in the central GBR. 47 Fish fuction as a sensitive indicator of coral reef degradation Christopher Goatley1, David Bellwood1, Roberta Bonaldo2, Rebecca Fox3 1. James Cook University, Townsville 2. Universidade de São Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil 3. UTS, Sydney Fishes play important roles in maintaining the resilience and recovery potential of coral reefs, yet our monitoring techniques rarely extend beyond counting the number of fishes in an ecosystem. The presence of fishes, however, does not mean that they are performing their functions in that location. The development of more sensitive tools, which complement traditional methods of monitoring coral reef fishes, may therefore reveal earlier signs of ecosystem changes, and provide an opportunity for pre-emptive responses. In this presentation I will reveal new, sensitive metrics of the ecosystem functions performed by fishes that allowed us to quantify subtle, yet destabilising, changes to the ecosystem on an inshore coral reef on the Great Barrier Reef. The findings clearly highlight that fish abundance does not equate to function on coral reefs, and that to fully understand the role played by fishes we should attempt to make direct process-based measurements. With herbivory proving to be among the most important functions performed by fishes on coral reefs, estimates of grazing and/or browsing rates appear to act as sensitive tools which can be used to detect subtle ecosystem degradation and may be critical in identifying the effects of disturbances prior to wide scale loss of fish species. 48 Functional distinctions among browsing herbivorous fishes: reduced redundancy and the importance of large individuals Robert P Streit1, David R Bellwood1, Andrew S Hoey1 1. James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia Publish consent withheld 49 Age, growth and maturity of oceanic whitetip shark (Carcharhinus longimanus) from Papua New Guinea Brooke M D'Alberto1, Andrew Chin1, Jonathan J Smart1, Leontine Baje2, 1, William T White3, 4, Colin A Simpfendorfer1 1. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture & College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. National Fisheries Authority, Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea 3. CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere, Hobart, TAS, Australia 4. Australian National Fish Collection, CSIRO National Research Collections Australia, Hobart, TAS, Australia Oceanic whitetip sharks (Carcharhinus longimanus) in the Western Central Pacific Ocean have been overfished and require improved assessment and management to enable planning recovery actions. Samples from 103 individuals, 70 males (76.0 – 240 cm TL) and 33 females (128 – 235 cm TL) were used to estimate age, growth and maturity parameters from sharks retained by longline fisheries in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Back calculation was used to account for the low number of juveniles and a multimodel framework with AICC used to estimate growth parameters. The von Bertalanffy growth model (VBGF) provided the best fitting growth model for both sexes. Parameter estimates for males were L∞ = 314 cm TL, k = 0.059 yr-1, L0 = 75.1 cm TL, and L∞ = 317 cm TL, k = 0.057 yr-1, L0 = 74.7 cm TL for females. Maximum age was estimated to be 18 years for males and 17 years for females, with a calculated longevity of 24.6 years and 24.9 years, respectively. Males matured at 10.8 years and 193 cm TL, while females matured at 15.8 years and 224 cm TL. These are the first estimates of life history parameters for C. longimanus from PNG.Carcharhinus longimanus is a slow growing, late maturity species, with regional variation in life history parameters highlighting increased vulnerability to fishing pressure in this region. 50 Age and growth of the silky shark Carcharhinus Falciformis from Papua New Guinea Michael I Grant, Jonathan Smart, Colin Simpfendorfer, Andrew Chin, William White Carcharhinus falciformis is listed as near threatened on the IUCN red list. They are one of most heavily fished tropical shark species and are incidentally caught in significant numbers by long-line and purse seine fishing operations. Serious sustainability concerns from overfishing have emerged in recent years throughout their distribution, particularly within the Central West Pacific. Despite dominating local catch, life history information is not available for silky sharks in this region, impeding sound fisheries management. Age and growth estimates from length-at-age data (n= 527) were produced for the silky shark Carcharhinus falciformis from Papua New Guinea. Age estimates were produced from vertebral analysis conducted on samples collected by an on-board observer program operating in the Papua New Guinea long line fishery. A multi-model approach incorporating AIC was used to estimate growth rates which included the von Bertalanffy, logistic and Gompertz growth functions as candidate growth models. Estimates of length and age-at- maturity were also produced. 51 Age and growth of teraglin, Atractoscion aequidens (Family: Sciaenidae) in New South Wales and their implications for fisheries management Anne-Marie Hegarty1, John Stewart1, William Gladstone2 1. Fisheries NSW, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2. University of Technology, Sydney, NSW, Australia Teraglin (Atractoscion aequidens, family Sciaenidae) are found in eastern Australian waters from southern Queensland to Montague Island. In NSW, teraglin are targeted by the NSW Ocean Trap and Line commercial fishery and by recreational fishers. This is the first study of the life-history characteristics of A. aequidens in NSW and describes the geographical and temporal variation in age, growth, and reproductive characteristics of this species and compares life history parameters with populations in southern Queensland and South Africa. A. aequidens is fast growing reaching approximately 40 - 45 cm FL in the first year of life and can live to 14 years. Preliminary analysis indicates the age at which 50% of the population matures is approximately 1 year old, this is similar to results found in QLD. In South Africa, the same species matures at 90 cm FL and 5 years of age. The commercial fishery in NSW is predominantly based on young fish < 3 years and there are concerns that this species may be subject to unacceptable levels of fishing mortality. 52 Long term trends in juvenile blue grenadier Macruronus novaezelandiae otolith increment growth variability and fishing zone sex ratio on the west coast of Tasmania. Philip Sweetman, James Haddy Growth is a fundamental biological process in the dynamics of fish populations and is the basic parameter underlying characteristics such as stock biomass and size frequencies. Investigators of inter-annual variability in fish growth often use hard body part analysis, such as variability in otolith increment widths as a proxy for somatic growth. This study presents inter-annual variability of otolith growth in blue grenadier Macruronus novaezelandiae off the west coast of Tasmania from 1991 to 2011. Capture size at age data highlighted that M. novaezelandiae females grow larger than males with mean size at age statistically diverging by 3 years of age and remaining separated thereafter. In contrast, statistical differences in mean otolith increment widths at age between sexes were detected at earlier ages but these differences were lost after the age of 7. Inter-annual variation in mean otolith increment widths for the first four increment zones (juvenile zones) all showed a similar trend with declining increment widths from 2006 to 2010. Inter-annual cohort sex ratios across year-of-birth also varied (χ2 = 366.11, df40, p << 0.0001) and displayed a similar trend to the first year otolith increment growth profiles of both male and females. Correlation of birth year sex ratio with mean otolith increment widths indicated a highly statistically significant negative correlation with first year growth declining in both genders with increasing numbers of male offspring (Male: r(19) = 0.71, p < 0.001; Female: r(19) = 0.66, p = 0.001). 53 Deepwater sharks and rays of the Great Barrier Reef: how vulnerable are they? Cassandra L Rigby1, William T White2, Colin A Simpfendorfer1 1. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture & College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, Qld, Australia 2. Australian National Fish Collection, CSIRO, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia The deepwater sharks and rays of the Great Barrier Reef are poorly known and life history information is required to enable their effective management. The shark and ray bycatch from the deepwater eastern king prawn fishery at the Swain Reefs in the southern Great Barrier Reef was examined to determine the species present and provide information on their life histories. In all, 1533 individuals were collected from 11 deepwater shark and ray species, with the Argus skate Dipturus polyommata, piked spurdog Squalus megalops and pale spotted catshark Asymbolus pallidusthe most commonly caught. All but one species is endemic to Australia with five species restricted to waters offshore from Queensland. This high level of endemism and geographically restricted distribution is common among deepwater sharks and rays and potentially reduces their resilience to fishing pressure. The life history traits across all species were characteristic of deep water sharks and rays with relatively large length at maturity, small litters and low ovarian fecundity; all indicative of low biological productivity. However, variability among these traits and spatial and bathymetric distributions of the species suggests differing degrees of resilience to fishing pressure. This highlights the need to monitor the bycatch of these species in fisheries within the Great Barrier Reef. 54 Running out of stream. Drivers of occurrence and abundance in a thermally restricted headwater fish. Mischa Turschwell1, 2, Stephen Balcombe 1, Erin Peterson3, Ashley Steel4, Fran Sheldon1 1. Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, Nathan, Queensland , Australia 2. Data61, CSIRO, Brisbane, Queensland , Australia 3. Australian Centre for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers and the Institute for Future Environments, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane , Queensland , Australia 4. Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Seattle , Washington, USA For many freshwater fish there is often little known about the spatio-temporal drivers of their distribution, particularly among different life stages, making their conservation challenging. We used two-stage hurdle models to investigate drivers of occurrence and abundance for locally threatened adult and juvenile northern river blackfish in the upper Condamine River, Queensland, Australia. Our results demonstrate that there are different processes driving occurrence versus abundance between the two life-history stages. Both adult and juvenile occurrence were negatively associated with high magnitude, extended warming events, suggesting blackfish are thermally restricted to cooler headwaters. Furthermore, juvenile fish demonstrated increased sensitivity to high stream temperatures as compared to adults. In contrast, drivers of abundance differed between life-history stages. Adult fish were negatively associated with increased fine sediment loads, while juveniles were negatively associated with a hydrologically-active inverse-distance-weighted grazing metric that accounted for the greater influence of grazed land close to stream or in areas of high overland flow. By teasing out environmental drivers affecting multiple life-history stages of a locally threatened headwater species, our approach allows us to provide direct management recommendations for best conserving this species, as well as ecologically similar headwater fishes and their associated habitats. 55 Variation in size-structure, diet and habitat use in the Darling hardyhead, Craterocephalus amniculus Crowley & Ivantsoff 1990, in the upper Macintyre River, northern Murray-Darling Basin Karl G Moy, Glenn WIlson1 1. University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales, Australia The Darling hardyhead, Craterocephalus amniculus (Atherinidae), is a threatened fish species inhabiting upstream reaches of a number of northern Murray-Darling Basin catchments. We examined patterns of seasonal size structure, interannual and spatial variation in diet, and habitat selection in this species across three sites and four seasons in the upper Macintyre River, northern New South Wales. Size structure data suggested a single annual spawning season in late September or early October, with only a single cohort apparent in the population in three of the four seasons. Dietary diversity increased with distance downstream. At the two upstream sites, aquatic invertebrates made up most of the diet while over half the gut contents at the downstream site was unidentified detritus. Diets varied significantly, both between seasons at the downstream site and among the three sites. Preference was shown for pool habitats with a sand or cobble substrate, increased channel depth and width and distance from the bank, and reduced flow velocity, while in-stream woody debris cover, and exotic riparian vegetation cover were avoided. Darling hardyhead may be vulnerable to further population decline in light of its narrow spawning season and habitat preferences. However, comparable data from nearby catchments will be necessary to ascertain the species’ conservation status across its broader distribution. 56 Piecing together a living puzzle: biogeographic patterns in some shallow water sharks and rays in New Guinea William White1, Gerry Allen, Mark Erdmann 1. CSIRO, Hobart, TAS, Australia Understanding the biogeography of organisms provides us with a better understanding of the evolutionary patterns and processes which have led to their present day distributions. Biogeographic information can be crucial for understanding how species react to changes in their environment. New Guinea has a very complicated geological history and is one of the most mobile zones in the earth’s crust. Combined with its location in the Coral Triangle, this has resulted in New Guinea having one of the most diverse and unique floral and faunal assemblages in the world. While there have been many studies on the biogeographic patterns of many invertebrate, terrestrial vertebrates and plants in New Guinea, there have been far fewer marine organism-focused studies and no detailed shark and ray specific studies. In this study, the biogeographic patterns of three shallow-water, reef associated elasmobranch species are considered. The epaulette sharks (genus Hemiscyllium) contains 9 species, with 7 restricted to the New Guinea region and the other two found only in northern Australia. While morphologically very similar, they can be readily separated based on their coloration. The bluespotted fantail rays (genus Taeniura) were previously considered to consist of a single Indo-West Pacific species, but taxonomic studies have revealed that the Pacific Island populations represent a distinct species. In New Guinea, both species occur but do not overlap in their distributions. Recent taxonomic studies on the maskrays (genus Neotrygon) suggest that their distribution in the New Guinea region is more complicated than it was previously considered to be. The results of this study highlight the importance of both detailed regional studies and biological collections in order to obtain detailed biogeographic information for various organisms. 57 The role of fishes in the evolution and ecology of coral reefs David Bellwood1 1. College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia Fishes have driven the evolution and ecology of reef ecosystems for over 200 million years and today, fishes are the strongest link between humans and coral reefs. This presentation will (i) explore the importance of fishes in shaping the evolution of marine ecosystems, especially coral reefs, (ii) examine the critical roles of fishes in maintaining ecosystem processes, and (iii) discuss how fishes reveal the nature and impacts of human activity on coral reefs and in other ecosystems. The overarching goal of my research has been to develop a picture of coral reefs as functional ecosystems. The approach has enabled us to examine changes over evolutionary timescales, looking at how reefs operated rather than simply documenting changes in diversity through time. More importantly, this functional approach also provides insights into the critical importance of fishes in maintaining key processes on modern coral reefs. By recognising these processes, we are able to understand how human activity is shaping the future of coral reefs and other aquatic ecosystems. Our capacity to modify fish populations, for example, can profoundly alter marine ecosystems. Yet if these changes are detected early and if appropriate measures are taken, our interactions with fishes may enable us to plan for positive outcomes in an increasingly uncertain future. Our ability to understand the importance of fishes, not only for humans, but also for marine ecosystems, will be critical for our future welfare. Once simply targets for the dinner plate, fishes may become one of our best allies when coping with environmental change. 58 Fine-scale population structure and sex-biased dispersal of a highly philopatric coastal shark species Jo Day1, Jennalee Clark2, Culum Brown2 1. Taronga Conservation Society Australia, Mosman, NSW, Australia 2. Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia Understanding population connectivity of marine species is becoming increasingly important for conservation planning, especially for species inhabiting coastal environments where anthropogenic threats are escalating. A recent acoustic tracking study on Port Jackson sharks (PJs) breeding in Jervis Bay, NSW, has discovered that PJs undertake yearly long-distance migrations as far south as Tasmania. There is also early evidence of PJs breeding in Sydney waters migrating south at similar times. However, not all sharks from Jervis Bay appear to follow the same the migration pattern and the reasons for these migrations are generally not well understood. Given the overlap of migration pathways between Jervis Bay and Sydney aggregations, we investigated the genetic structure and dispersal patterns of PJs from these two regions. We analysed 89 PJs samples using ten highly polymorphic microsatellites that were developed for this study as well the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region. Despite the breeding sites being separated by only 200km, significant population structure was detected using mtDNA. This result was not observed with microsatellites and further analysis based on assignment indices confirmed malebiased dispersal for this species. However, observations of fine-scale movement patterns in Jervis Bay over multiple breeding seasons have shown that adult males are generally more philopatric than females, returning to the same breeding site year after year. Taken together, these results suggest that juvenile male PJs may be dispersing from their natal area, thereby facilitating gene flow among these NSW coastal populations. This study emphasizes the need for multi-disciplinary approach to understanding population connectivity, especially when developing conservation management strategies for threatened or ecologically important marine species. 59 Integrative approach to elucidating the population structure of coastal reef fish in northern Australia (Part I: Otolith chemistry) Jonathan A Taylor, Di P Barton1, 2, Laura Taillebois2, David Crook2, Thor Saunders1, Alan Grieg1, Mark Hearnden1, David J Welch3, Stephen J Newman4 1. Fisheries Research, Northern Territory Government Department of Primary Industry and Fisheries, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia 2. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia 3. C2O Fisheries, Cairns, Queensland, Australia 4. Western Australian Fisheries and Marine Research Laboratories, Department of Fisheries, Government of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia Information on the structure of exploited fish populations is critical to their sustainable harvest, allowing appropriate management regimes to be implemented at spatial scales that reflect the population dynamics of a species across it range. This project utilised microsatellite DNA, parasitology and otolith microchemistry techniques to examine population structure among populations of three coastal reef fish species across northern Australia (Protonibea diacanthus, Lutjanus johnii and Lethrinus laticaudis). Part I of the project involved using otolith microchemistry to examine population structuring of these three species of coastal reef fish. By analysing variation in multi-elemental otolith chemical signatures, it is possible to estimate the levels of connectivity and population structure between fish sampled from different areas. Additionally, the persistence of these patterns was investigated by sampling three specific areas of each otolith that represented a different life history stage of the fish: the core, or “primordium”, reflecting the larval phase; the near-core, representing the early juvenile phase; and the otolith margin to represent the sub adult/adult phase. Analysis of the multi-elemental otolith chemistry signatures using linear discriminant function analysis (LDFA) and multi-variate analysis of variance (MANOVA) showed that variability in otolith chemistry was sufficient to discriminate fish collected from sites separated by distances of 50-1200km. Population structure is influenced by behavioural and physical processes that act over a range of temporal scales. Therefore, the use of multiple and potentially complementary techniques that integrate information over different scales is likely to provide the best inference on population structure of fish. Incorporating the results from the otolith microchemistry research with the genetic and parasitology results, which have different spatial and temporal resolution, allows more precise estimation of both the spatial and temporal scale of stock structuring that exists for these three commercial and recreationally important fish species across northern Australia. 60 Integrative approach to elucidating the population structure of coastal reef fish in northern Australia (Part II: Parasite assemblages). Di Barton1, Laura Taillebois2, Jonathan Taylor1, David Crook2, Thor Saunders1, David Welch3, Mark Hearnden1, Steve Newman4, MichaelTravers Travers4, Richard Saunders5, Safia Maher6, Christine Dudgeon6, Jenny Ovenden6 1. NT DPIF, Berrimah, NT, Australia 2. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT, Australia 3. C2O Fisheries, Cairns, Qld, Australia 4. Western Australian Fisheries and Marine Research Laboratories, Department of Fisheries, Government of Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia 5. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture, James Cook University, Townsville, Qld, Australia 6. Molecular Fisheries Laboratory, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia The integrated use of a number of techniques that cover multiple aspects of a fish species' life history have been shown to provide the best basis for potential management of that species. Parasites provide information on aspects of short- to long-term aspects of a fish's biology, depending on the parasite species in question. In this study, the parasite fauna of three commercial and recreationally important fish species across northern Australia (Protonibea diacanthus, Lutjanus johnii and Lethrinus laticaudis) were examined in combination with microsatellite genetics and otolith microchemistry to determine potential stock structure for future management scenarios. A diverse range of parasites was found to infect all fish across the collection range from the Pilbara region in Western Australia to Moreton Bay in South-East Queensland. For all three fish species their parasite fauna provided high levels of reclassification success, usually 2-3x that calculated by chance alone, providing fine-scale spatial structuring of their fish hosts. Protonibea diacanthus had the highest level of reclassification success, with 67% overall, followed by Le. laticaudis with 56% and L. johnii with 44%. Once subdivided into jurisdictional management units, reclassification success increased with up to 90% of fish successfully reclassified in some regions. Between the three fish species, different groups of parasites were found to be better overall predictors of their host stock structure: encysted larval stages for P. diacanthus and L. johnii and external parasites for Le. laticaudis. 61 Integrative approach to elucidating the population structure of coastal reef fish in northern Australia (Part III: Genetics and summary) Laura Taillebois1, Di P Barton2, 1, Jonathan Taylor2, David A Crook1, Thor Saunders2, Alan Grieg2, Mark Hearnden2, David J Welch3, Stephen J Newman4, Michael J Travers4, Richard J Saunders5, 6, Christine Dudgeon7, Safia Maher7, Jennifer Ovenden7 1. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia 2. Department of Primary Industry and Fisheries, Northern Territory Government, Berrimah, Northern Territory, Australia 3. C2O Fisheries, Cairns, Queensland, Australia 4. Western Australian Fisheries and Marine Research Laboratories, Government of Western Australia, North Beach, Western Australia, Australia 5. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture, James Cook University, Douglas, Queensland, Australia 6. Animal Science, Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia 7. Molecular Fisheries Laboratory, School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia Modeling fisheries populations is one of the many components of management aimed at achieving sustainable exploitation. Definition of the spatial extent of stocks, in particular, is a founding principle of this assessment process. The concept of stocks as natural management units is based on demographically cohesive groups of individuals of a species and is commonly defined in genetic terms. The status of coastal reef fisheries in northern Australia remains undefined for many exploited species. In this study, we aimed to identify the stock structure of three commercial and recreationally important fish species across northern Australia (Protonibea diacanthus, Lutjanus johnii and Lethrinus laticaudis) using a combination of ecological, geochemical and genetic techniques for uptake into fisheries management. All three species were sampled across their Australian distributional range and between 10-13 genetic microsatellite DNA markers were specifically developed for each species. The distribution of the genetic diversity was characterized and tested using F-statistics and Bayesian model-based approaches, and revealed contrasting results between the three species. Protonibea diacanthus and Le. laticaudis presented low but significant FST and the Bayesian clustering revealed distinct populations and major genetic breaks, whereas no pattern of genetic structure was revealed for Lutjanus johnii. Our holistic approach to stock discrimination combines and integrates parasites abundances, otolith microchemistry and population genetics. The different levels at which these three techniques operate - from the individual life history to multi-generational levels of population connectivity - ensures that if stock structure exists, it has more chance to be revealed and elucidated than using a single technique. 62 Could capture stress affect future reproductive outcomes in elasmobranch species? A case study: the southern fiddler ray, Trygonorrhina dumerilii. Leonardo Guida1, Terence I Walker1, Richard D Reina1, Cynthia A Awruch3, 2 1. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 2. School of Biological Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 3. Grupo de Ecofisiología Aplicada al Manejo y Conservación de la Fauna Silvestre. CESIMAR (Centro Para el Estudio de Sistemas Marinos) , CENPAT (Centro Nacional Patagonico)-CONICET, Puerto Madryn, Chubut, Argentina Assessing fisheries impacts on elasmobranch populations has focused on quantifying immediate and delayed mortality rates. However, little is known about the sub-lethal effects of capture stress, particularly in pregnant females. The southern fiddler ray (Trygonorrhina dumerilii) was used as a case study to investigate the consequences of capture on a pregnant elasmobranch species. Nineteen pregnant females were collected, 10 were kept for control and nine were subjected to trawl capture (8 hr) followed immediately by air exposure (30 min). Immediately prior to, and for up to 28 days post trawling, all females were routinely sampled to monitor changes in total body mass (TBM), sex-steroid levels (estrogen, progesterone, testosterone) and granulocyte to lymphocyte ratio (G:L). At parturition, neonates were measured for total length (TL), TBM and where possible, G:L was also calculated. Trawling reduced maternal TBM and elevated the G:L for up to 28 days post trawling. Trawling did not significantly affect any sex-steroid titters, however females reported lower than expected concentrations in sex-steroids at 28 days post trawling. Neonates who experienced pre-natal stress were lower in TBM and TL, and had an elevated G:L. Our results suggest that depending on the magnitude of environmental stress experienced by a pregnant female, a single capture event is sufficient to influence current and future reproductive efforts. Although more studies will be necessary to evaluate whether these results could be generalised to the entire elasmobranch group, the outcomes of this study suggest that stress related reproductive effects may have management implications. 63 Are sightings of fish outside their usual ranges early indications of climate-driven range shifts or false alarms? Hannah E Fogarty1, Michael T Burrows2, Gretta T Pecl1, Lucy M Robinson3, Elvira S Poloczanska4 1. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. Scottish Association for Marine Science, Oban 3. Commission for the Conservation of Marine Antarctic Living Resources, Hobart 4. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, St Lucia, Queensland Shifts in species ranges are a global phenomenon, well known to occur in response to a changing climate. New species arriving in an area may become pest species, modify ecosystem structure, or represent challenges or opportunities for fisheries and recreation. Early detection of range shifts and prompt implementation of any appropriate management strategies is therefore crucial. This study investigates whether “first sightings” marine of species outside their normal ranges could provide an early warning of impending climate-driven range shifts. We examine the relationships between first sightings and marine regions defined by patterns of local climate velocities (calculated on a 50-year time scale). as lacking connections to warmer areas (climate ‘source’), where moving isotherms converge (‘corridors’), and places were isotherms locally disappear (‘sink’ areas), while also considering the distribution of observational effort (i.e. number of sampling days recorded for biological observations in global databases). Additionally, we investigate the latitudinal band first sightings were recorded in, and species’ thermal affiliations. We found that first sightings in climate sink and divergent regions occur independently of sampling effort and ocean area, indicating that climate velocity has influenced the distribution of first sightings in sink regions. The majority of our first sightings appear to be tropical and sub-tropical species moving towards high latitudes, as would be expected in climate warming. Our results indicate that first sightings are likely related to longer-term climatic processes, and could therefore have potential use to indicate likely climate-driven range shifts. The development of an approach to detect impending range shifts at an early stage will allow resource managers and researchers to better manage opportunities resulting from range-shifting species before they potentially colonise. 64 Interactions between cleaners and client fishes Kate S Hutson1, Alexandra S Grutter2, Thane A Militz1, David B Vaughan1 1. James Cook University, Douglas, QLD, Australia 2. School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia Fishes are constantly subjected to parasitic attack, pathogenic infections and associated injury. How fishes respond to these challenges often influences their survival. Infected and/or injured fishes may engage in behaviours that mitigate parasite loads and promote wound healing. Behaviours range from attempts to dislodge parasites against hard substrates, migrations to actively alter the osmotic environment, or complex cleaning interactions with specialist ‘cleaners’. We estimated that global cleaner diversity comprises 207 cleaner fish (from 106 genera representing 36 families) and 51 cleaner shrimp (from 11 genera representing six families). Experiments in aquaria showed that cleaner shrimp clean during the day and night, whereas cleaner fish are strictly diurnal in their cleaning, which permits a resurgence of parasite abundance on ‘cleaned’ host fishes the following night. Cleaner shrimp also reduced the infection pressure of a parasitic monogenean flatworm by eating the parasite’s benthic eggs and free-swimming infective larvae, implying that scavenging behaviour by shrimp has the potential to remove parasite life stages on substrates and in the water column. Moreover, cleaner shrimp masticate parasite eggs, larvae and adults and render them non-viable whereas parasite eggs can pass through the intestinal tracts of cleaner fish unabated in their capacity to hatch. Although cleaner fish are believed to support wound healing on injured fish clients in the wild, cleaner shrimp may aggravate injuries opportunistically on fish in aquaria, indicating that client fish may actively regulate these interactions. The diversity of species that engage in cleaning symbiosis and the varied regulatory behaviours offered by cleaner fish and shrimp offer substantial value to the fitness of client fishes and may be vital to temperate and tropical reef diversity. 65 How does metabolic phenotype and social interaction effect growth disparity of Spiny Lobster? Audrey Daning Tuzan1, Quinn P. Fitzgibbon1, Chris Carter1, Stephen Battaglene1 1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia Spiny lobsters can display large difference in growth rate which is thought to be associated with agonistic behaviour of dominant individuals controlling a disproportional share of food resources. Recently it become clear that variability in the metabolic physiology of individuals can an important factor influencing behaviour and growth of marine organisms and thus is an important consideration for understanding intraspecific diversity of performance. However, the relationship between metabolic phenotype and growth has not been previously examined in any spiny lobster species. We investigated the possible effect of individual variation in metabolic rate and growth performance of juvenile Eastern spiny lobster (Sagmariasus verreauxi). In a laboratory experiment, juvenile lobsters were randomly distributed into two rearing conditions; individual (n=17) and communal (n=20). Growth performance, survival and feed intake was greater for juveniles were cultured communally demonstrating that social interaction is important for promoting growth of lobsters. The relationship between growth and standard metabolic rate showed positive correlation in individual cultured juveniles indicating a direct link between metabolic phenotype of individuals and growth. In communal culture, the influence of social interaction outweighed the direct relationship between metabolic rate and lobster growth. The results demonstrated that growth performance of spiny lobsters is affected by individual variation in metabolic status but social behaviour plays a more dominant role in determining the growth of individuals. 66 Trophic ecology of a whale shark aggreagtion at Ningaloo Reef (Western Australia), from stable isotope anlaysis Lara Marcus1, Patti Virtue1, 2, Peter Nichols2, Mark Meekan3, Heidi Pethybridge1, 2 1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Hobart 2. CSIRO Ocean &Atmosphere, Hobart 3. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Perth We investigated the trophic ecology of whale sharks using carbon and nitrogen-stable isotope analysis from both whale shark sub-dermal tissue and an extensive set of potential prey including zooplankton and other pelagic organisms from Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia, in two consecutive years (2013 and 2014). Results showed that the composition of stable isotopes of whale shark sub-dermal tissue was not significantly different between years or sex. A positive relationship was however found between δ13C and δ15N and shark total length suggesting ontogenetic shift with size. When comparing whale shark sub-dermal tissue with potential prey isotopic signatures, δ15N values situated whale sharks as a secondary consumer similar to other zooplanktivores organisms. An enrichment in δ13C values in whale shark sub-dermal tissue resulted in no match in isotopic signatures between predator and potential prey. These results indicated that whale sharks might obtain part of their diet from other sources than merely pelagic. Overall, stable isotope analysis combined with non-lethal sampling techniques have demonstrated to be a good tool to examine trophic intravariability in large predators as well as to infer food web relationships. 67 Mucus in elasmobranch dietary studies using stable isotope analysis: preliminary findings from the giant manta ray Katherine Burgess1, Andrea D Marshall 2, Michael B Bennett1 1. The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia 2. Marine Megafauna Foundation , Truckee, California , USA Stable isotope analysis provides an insight into feeding ecology and trophic interactions and is fast becoming a preferred, nonlethal tool in elasmobranch research. Slow turnover tissues, such as muscle, are representative of a long-term average (integrated) isotopic signal and do not represent recently ingested prey items. In comparison, tissues with fast turnover rates can be used to provide insight into seasonal dietary shifts that coincide with changes in foraging grounds. Validated fast turnover tissues in elasmobranchs include blood and liver, but these are difficult or impossible to sample in large free-swimming species. In bony fishes, mucus has been shown to be a rapid turnover tissue of value in dietary studies using stable isotope analysis, however, its utility in elasmobranch feeding studies is unknown. Here, we report the first attempt at processing mucus for use in stable isotope analysis for any elasmobranch species. Mucus and muscle tissue were collected from giant manta rays Manta birostris while on SCUBA. In comparison to muscle tissue the average mucus δ 13C was depleted, and was similar to surface zooplankton δ13C values. No significant differences were found between muscle and mucus δ15N, indicating that M. birostris feeds at the same trophic level irrespective of a change in the source of dietary carbon. Results suggest that M. birostris mucus may be representative of a recent resource switch from a δ 13C-enriched food web to surface zooplankton. The time period represented by isotopic values in different tissues is poorly understood for migratory elasmobranch species. Analysis of mucus may provide insight into aggregation site use by elusive and threatened elasmobranch species, however, controlled feeding studies are recommended to examine test the reliability of this approach. 68 Determining the functional limitations of using fatty acid profiles for diet determination with punch biopsies and degraded tissue samples Lauren Meyer1, Heidi Pethybridge2, Peter D Nichols2, Crystal Beckman3, Barry Bruce2, Charlie Huveneers1 1. Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia 2. CSIRO, Hobart, Tasmania 3. South Australian Research and Development Institute, Adelaide, South Australia Biochemical markers are used to investigate food web structure of many ecosystems and to describe the trophic ecology of an increasing number of marine taxa. Fatty acids (FA) profiles are a valuable tool to study trophic interactions between marine organisms. However, functional limitations and capabilities of these biomarkers must be assessed within the context of speciesspecific collection methods. We analysed FA in muscle tissue biopsies through non-lethal sampling of white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) and investigated the minimum sample size needed to provide reliable measurements of FA profiles and the effects of sample degradation over time. Muscle samples as small as 12 mg DW provided reliable and consistent FA profiles, while connective tissue less than 40 mg DW yielded inconsistent profiles. Both amounts validate the suitability of FA analysis for use with punch biopsies, and suggest the methods could be used with scalpel biopsies of smaller elasmobranchs. The integrity of FA profiles in muscle and connective tissue samples were retained for the first three days, with differences in FA profiles appearing over the following two days, including relative decreases in key FAs, making these degraded samples unreliable for accurate determination of dietary sources. Together, these investigations determined the functional limitations of FA analysis within the context of tissue collection methods available for a protected species from which tissue samples are logistically difficult to obtain. This study provided key information to ensure reliable FA profiles can be obtained to assess the feeding ecology of highorder predators, including the white shark. 69 Examining diet variation in euryhaline and coastal elasmobranchs using fatty acid and stable isotope biomarkers Sharon L Every2, 3, 1, Heidi R Pethybridge4, Christopher J Fulton3, Peter M Kyne2, David A Crook2 1. North Australia Marine Research Alliance, Darwin, NT, Australia 2. RIEL, CDU, Darwin, NT , Australia 3. Research School of Biology, ANU, Canberra, ACT, Australia 4. CSIRO, Hobart, Tas, Australia Euryhaline and coastal elasmobranchs are high-order predators that play important roles in ecosystem function and assemblage structure. Unfortunately, many of these species have declined in recent decades and are of increasing conversation concern. Understanding the trophic ecology of elasmobranchs in estuaries and coastal waters is important to develop our understanding of the ecological implications of these species and to inform conservation policy and management. Analyses of fatty acids (FA) and stable isotopes (SI) of δ13C and δ15N in body tissues are increasingly utilized, non-fatal approaches for obtaining integrated information on the dietary composition of animals (e.g., by collecting muscle biopsies or fin clips). In this study, we examined the dietary composition of four species of elasmobranchs (Carcharhinus leucas, Glyphis garricki, G. glyphis andRhizoprionodon taylori), and compared them with putative prey species via analysis of muscle biopsies. By correlating muscle FA and SI within prey and sharks, we found significant seasonal differences in FA and SI profiles of prey species, but that such a pattern did not occur in elasmobranches. Both Glyphis spp. had similar FA and SI profiles that indicate the use of fresh and estuarine prey. In contrast, local prey species made only a minor contribution to the diet of C. leucas, suggesting that this species relies on alternative food sources. There was little evidence of intra-specific dietary specialization in these species, which may be due to the changes in sites and seasons of prey species. Our study shows that these sharks feed across multiple ecosystems, congregating in productive sections of the river. 70 Developing robust and cost-effective methods for estimating the national recreational catch of southern bluefin tuna in Australia Andy Moore1, Kylie Hall2, Khageswor Giri2, Sean Tracey3, Lindsay Penrose1, Scott Hansen1, Peter Ward1, Ilona Stobutzki1, James Andrews2, Simon Nicol1, Paul Brown2 1. Department of Agriculture and Water Resources, Canberra, ACT, Australia 2. Fisheries Victoria, Queenscliff, Victoria, Australia 3. IMAS, Taroona, Tasmania, Australia Southern Bluefin Tuna (SBT) is an iconic species both domestically and internationally. The most recent stock assessment estimated the spawning stock biomass at 9 per cent of unfished levels. SBT is listed as conservation dependent under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act, endangered in New South Wales and threatened in Victoria. The stock is subject to an international rebuilding plan under the Convention for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna. Recreational fishing for SBT spans over 6,500 kilometres of Australia’s coastline and recreational fishing activity can be dispersed and episodic. Dedicated surveys for estimating SBT catch have occurred in Victoria and Tasmania with catch statistics for the other states coming from general angler surveys. SBT fishing is a low frequency activity and this characteristic has restricted the inference on total catch of SBT from general angler surveys. Hence, the total national recreational catch has never been quantified with the reliability needed for fisheries management. A project to develop methods for estimating the national recreational catch of SBT has been completed. The project reviewed survey options and trialled an on-site stratified random access point survey in South Australia. Data from this trial, expert angler interviews, and commercial catch was used to model and test various sampling strategies. The methods used to develop an optimal survey design for estimating SBT catch in Australia have application more generally for designing recreational angler surveys when disparate sampling frames and episodic fishing activity are present. 71 Using ramp cameras to assess recreational fishing effort Michael D. Smith1, 2, Paul W. Hamer3 1. Mezo Research, Melbourne, Victoria 2. University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3. Fisheries Victoria, Queenscliff, Victoria Many coastal and estuarine fisheries around Australia are now dominated by recreational fishing. This poses a problem for assessment and sustainable fisheries management because recreational catch and effort are difficult to track. While creel surveys and diary angler-type approaches can provide information on catch composition and catch rates, critical information on fishing effort is generally missing. This project has trialled the use of boat ramp cameras to obtain data on overall recreational boat fishing effort in Port Phillip Bay and the adjacent Western Port Bay in Victoria. Seven cameras have been installed since spring 2014. Each camera takes a photograph every 2 minutes, which results in well over 20,000 images per camera each month. Due to the time-intensive nature of the image analysis (viewing), we have explored sub-sampling approaches to provide an acceptable estimate of overall effort while requiring fewer images to be viewed. We performed sub-sampling estimates of the total catch using 20 – 50 percent of the total available images, and tested randomization routines using whole days or in hourly blocks, and also a routine which focussed more effort on times of expected activity (pre-dawn and pre-dusk). Sampling in hourly blocks randomized across all days of the study produced estimates with greater than 80 percent accuracy using less than 30 percent of total images, although the error rate increased as the total effort in the underlying data decreased. An alternative approach to reducing the total number of images is to use activity sensor software that is programmed so that the cameras take photographs only when a specific type of motion is detected in a set field of view. We present preliminary results on the performance of the activity sensor software, and prospects of this approach. 72 Improving the accuracy of recreational catch estimates with complementary surveys and auxiliary data on human dimensions Fabian I Trinnie1, Karina L Ryan, Brent S Wise, Norm G Hall 1. Department of Fisheries, WA Government, Hillarys, WA, Australia The accuracy of estimates of recreational catch and predictions of future catches can be improved by employing data from complementary surveys and adjusting for human dimensions and spatial factors. Data on the recreational component of the Western Australian fishery for western rock lobster (Panulirus cygnus) have been collected annually for 28 consecutive years using a mail survey of randomly-selected licence holders. During the 2000s, the mail survey was complemented by phone-diary surveys of licence holders selected from the same database using probability-based sampling. Research has focused on expanding the recreational catch data collected in these surveys to a whole-of-fishery level. The auxiliary data relating to human dimensions and spatial aspects of fishing, which were also collected in the surveys, have also provided a valuable time series on fishers’ avidity, experience, age, residence, fishing method (e.g. potting, diving), fishing gear and technology, depth and location of fishing. The extent of which these characteristics of both fishers and fishing activity can improve the estimates and predictions of recreational catch for this fishery is now being explored. The use of complementary surveys, in combination with continued collection, refinement, and application of human dimensions data, are strongly recommended for this and other recreational fisheries. 73 Managing for change: the Tasmanian recreational fishery for rock lobster Jeremy M Lyle1, Sean R Tracey1, Klaas Hartmann1 1. University of Tasmania, .Hobart, TAS, Australia Recreational fishers are highly responsive to changes in fish availability, either increasing or decreasing targeted effort and/or by switching between species. In Tasmania rock lobster support major commercial and recreational fisheries but over the past two decades stocks have undergone dramatic changes in abundance. Legal size biomass doubled between 1995 and 2005 and then almost halved over the following five years, influenced by poor recruitment. Catch rates for both sectors have declined and, for the recreational sector, levels of catch and effort have fallen as the number of active fishers and average days fished per fisher have declined. The recreational fishery is concentrated off the east coast, a region where the stock is in poorest condition. Modelling indicates that catches need to be reduced to facilitate stock recovery and a stock rebuilding strategy has been implemented. The strategy includes a 200 tonne catch cap that is based on a notional resource sharing arrangement of 21% for the recreational sector (42 tonnes) and 79% for the commercial sector (158 tonnes). In an attempt to constrain recreational catches, east coast bag limits have been reduced and recreational season length reduced by four months. However, modelling suggests that these measures are unlikely to constrain recreational catches to the catch share. As stocks recover, recreational fishing pressure is expected to increase with the potential to impact the rate of stock rebuilding, imposing significant challenges for resource management. In this presentation we examine relationships between stock size, fisher behaviour and management of the fishery. 74 Crossing lines: a multidisciplinary framework for assessing migratory hammerhead sharks across jurisdictional boundaries Andrew Chin1, Michelle Heupel2, Colin Simpfendorfer1, William White3 1. James Cook University, Douglas, QLD, Australia 2. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, QLD, Australia 3. CSIRO, Hobart, TAS, Australia The conservation and management of migratory species is complex and challenging. International agreements such as CITES and CMS provide frameworks to manage highly migratory species, but management can be compromised by lack of data and tractable mechanisms to integrate disparate datasets. Hammerhead sharks (Sphyrna spp.) are highly migratory species taken in coastal and oceanic fisheries around the world and are listed in CITES and CMS. A large scale assessment of scalloped hammerhead (S. lewini) and great hammerhead (S. mokarran) populations across northern Australia, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea was conducted to inform management responses to CITES and CMS. A simple Integrative Assessment Framework (IAF) was devised to systematically incorporate disparate data types across jurisdictions and create a regional synopsis. The IAF amalgamated data from fisheries catch records, fishery independent research, shark control programs, market surveys, BRUVS and citizen science data. Hammerhead populations are segregated by sex and size across the assessment area, with Australian populations dominated by juveniles and small sized adult males, while Indonesian and Papua New Guinean populations contained large adult females. The final IAF assessment stage introduced genetic and tagging data to produce conceptual models of regional hammerhead movement and stock structure. Several viable hypotheses for regional stock structure and movement patterns were produced, but more data are needed to identify the most plausible hypothesis. This work demonstrates a simple conceptual framework for assessing migratory species, and highlights priority areas for management and research of hammerheads in the Australasian region. 75 Genetics: a vital tool for understanding connectivity and the ability of a threatened marine species (Maugean skate (Zearaja maugeana)) to withstand future challenges. Kay Weltz, Jennifer Ovenden1, Jeremy Lyle2, Jess AT Morgan1, David A Moreno2, Dean C Blower1, Jayson M Semmens2 1. University of Queensland, Brisbane 2. IMAS, UTAS, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia The Maugean skate (Zearaja maugeana) has been classified as Endangered by the IUCN and the Australian EPBC Act, based on its low estimated population size and restricted range in one estuarine embayment in western Tasmania, Macquarie Harbour (MH). Given Z.maugeana’s highly restricted distribution, this species is vulnerable to environmental changes caused by natural and anthropogenic forces present in MH. With no knowledge existing on population characteristics of Z.maugeana, population genetics was used to investigate habitat use, population connectivity, population structure, genetic diversity and effective population size (Ne) of Z.maugeana in MH. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) results showed no significant variation for 16 individuals for four gene regions, with a haplotype diversity (h) and nucleotide diversity (π) of zero within each region. Genotyping results of 195 individuals using 8 microsatellites suggest the population in MH is one large, interbreeding population with very low genetic diversity (Fst=0.35±0.2). Low genetic diversity in mtDNA and microsatellites could indicate a genome wide lack of genetic diversity, which may reduce the ability of Z.maugeana to withstand future environmental changes. Environmental DNA (eDNA) was investigated as an additional genetic tool for determining habitat use and connectivity of endangered elasmobranchs in the wild. Zearaja maugeana eDNA was successfully amplified from as little as 1L of marine water collected at depth in MH. Exponential decay models revealed that Z.maugeana eDNA persists 6.4 days in MH water, before dropping below detectable limits of the assay. These results may be incorporated into the development of future eDNA assays for the detection and management of threatened elasmobranchs. Overall, genetics is an important tool for investigating habitat use and connectivity of populations of threatened marine species, providing vital information for conservation and management at appropriate scales. With recent molecular technological advances, genetics can be incorporated into all population studies on threatened marine species, without requiring extensive genetic expertise. 76 Inferring contemporary and long-term genetic connectivity from juveniles. Pierre Feutry1, Oliver Berry2, Peter M Kyne3, Richard D Pillans4, Richard Hillary1, Peter M Grewe1, James R Marthick5, Grant Johnson6, Rasanthi Gunasekera1, Nic Bax1, 5, Mark Bravington1 1. CSIRO, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. CSIRO, Perth, WA, Australia 3. Charles Darwin University, Casuarina, NT, Australia 4. CSIRO, Brisbane, QLD, Australia 5. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 6. Department of Primary Industry and Fisheries, NT Government, Darwin, NT, Australia Understanding population connectivity using molecular markers has broad application in natural resource management. The most popular approach has been indirect estimates of connectivity derived from allele frequencies. More recently, the spatial distribution of parent-offspring and full-sibling (FS) pairs has been used to provide direct estimates of larval or juvenile movements. In combination, these approaches potentially provide contemporary and long-term connectivity estimates. Here we combine indirect estimates from whole mitogenome sequences and nuclear SNPs with direct estimates of adult and juvenile movements from FS and half-sibling (HS) data for the Critically Endangered Speartooth Shark Glyphis glyphis. Over 350 juveniles were captured from the three river systems in tropical northern Australia where this species is found. None of the 72 FS and 24 same-cohort HS pairs of juvenile sharks were captured in different rivers, suggesting strong river fidelity in juveniles. In contrast, 18 of the 121 cross-cohort HS pairs identified were captured between the two closest river systems (c. 150 km apart) demonstrating recent male breeding movements between these rivers, but not more widely. Mitogenomic analyses revealed river specific long-term female reproductive philopatry. Allele frequency differences in the nuclear SNP data were observed between the river systems. However, between the two closest river systems, this only reflected the restricted movements of juveniles since it was not evident when FS and HS pairs were discarded. Accounting for juvenile river fidelity, female philopatry and the presence of two distinct gene pools is important for the management of this threatened species. 77 Genome wide SNPs reveal fine-scale population substructure in School Sharks (Galeorhinus galeus) Floriaan Devloo-Delva1, Gregory E. Maes2, 3, 4, Sebastián I Hernández5, 6, Jaime S Mcallister7, Peter M. Grewe1, Robin B. Thomson1, Pierre Feutry1 1. Oceans and Atmosphere, CSIRO, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 2. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture, Comparative Genomics Centre, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia 3. Laboratory of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Genomics, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium 4. Center for Human Genetics, UZ Leuven- Genomics Core, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium 5. School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand 6. Departamento de Biología Marina, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, Universidad Católica del Norte, Casilla 117, Coquimbo, Chile 7. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, , University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia School Shark (Galeorhinus galeus) is a semi-pelagic, highly migratory species with a widespread distribution in temperate waters. Formerly an important component of the Australian shark fishery, Australian School Shark stocks have been depleted to below 20% of their virgin biomass. The recovery management plan for this species has impacted other shark fisheries where School Sharks represent a significant bycatch, for example, in the Gummy Shark (Mustelus antarcticus) fishery. This has prompted renewed efforts to develop management strategies through better understanding of stock structure and connectivity of School Shark populations in Australian and New Zealand waters. To date, molecular based studies on Australasian School Shark population structure yielded contrasting results and have suggested Australian and New Zealand individuals could be clustered and managed as either one or multiple populations. Management practices in Australasian water reflect this uncertainty where current management considers two separate Australian and New Zealand stocks. However, more recently there has been discussion of managing them as a single stock for assessment purposes. Accurate determination of stock structure and population connectivity is crucial to inform this decision. In this study, we assess of the genetic composition and population connectivity between Australian and New Zealand School Sharks using genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP). Between 2009 and 2015, 188 neonate and adult individuals originating from Australia (South Australia, West Tasmania and South Tasmania) and New Zealand were collected and genotyped. Both neutral and outlier loci were analysed to detect finescale signals of connectivity and local adaptation. Our results indicate there may be a lower level of genetic connectivity than previously assumed with outlier loci potentially indicating locally adapted groups at the regional level. Further investigations of population structure among Australian and New Zealand sampling locations could help to guide management strategies developed for the School Shark and Gummy Shark fisheries. 78 Microsatellites of megafauna: what does genetics tell us about Australian manta rays? Amelia J Armstrong1, Christine L Dudgeon1, Michael B Bennett1, Kathy A Townsend1, Anthony J Richardson2, 3, Jennifer R Ovenden1, 4 1. School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia 2. School of Mathematics and Physics, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia 3. Oceans and Atmosphere, CSIRO, Brisbane, QLD, Australia 4. Molecular Fisheries Laboratory, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia Reef manta rays (Manta alfredi) are a valuable ecotourism commodity in many areas of the world. Despite their value and threatened species listing, much remains unknown with regards to local population sizes and movements. Reef manta rays predictably aggregate at known sites seasonally, allowing for photographic mark-recapture, biopsy and tagging. Currently, estimation of reef manta ray population size and movement relies largely on long term mark-recapture photographic databases. Molecular genetic approaches provide a unique conservation tool for the study of threatened marine species. Not only can they provide estimates of genetic effective population size (Ne), they can offer additional insight into critical parameters for threatened species management, such as population structure and connectivity. In this study, we are using 10 microsatellite loci to investigate the population genetic structure of reef manta rays from three locations of ecotourism value around Australia. Small tissue biopsies were obtained from manta rays at Lady Elliot Island and Stradbroke Island in Queensland, and from Coral Bay in Western Australia. Hypotheses of connectivity between locations were derived from the known photographic movement history for each individual. Preliminary results will be presented testing for significant differences in populations of manta rays on the East and West coasts of Australia and between two photo ID-connected populations on the East coast. Although this study is ongoing, preliminary results emphasise the importance and value of molecular genetic approaches. 79 The Genetic Status of the Tiger Shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) in Australian Waters Safia Maher2, 1, Mike Bennett1, Einar Nielsen3, Bonnie Holmes1, Julian Pepperell4, Jennifer Ovenden2 1. School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Queensland, Australia, Brisbane 2. Molecular Fisheries Laboratory, Brisbane 3. DTU AQUA National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark , Denmark 4. Pepperell Research and Consulting Pty Ltd, PO Box 1475, Noosaville BC, Australia The tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) occupies tropical and warm-temperate coastal and shelf waters throughout the world, and like many large elasmobranch species, faces various anthropogenic threats, particularly fishing-related mortality.The population structure and genetic diversity of G. cuvier is unknown and data allowing evaluation of the effect of current levels of exploitation of the species is lacking. Mitochondrial DNA sequence data obtained from two molecular markers (control region and NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2) was used to investigate the genetic population structure of the tiger shark across its range in Australia as well past and present genetic diversity. Historical DNA extracted from old tiger shark jaws enabled analysis of temporal changes in genetic diversity. Contemporary tiger shark samples were obtained from within the Coral and Tasman Seas on the east coast, the Indian Ocean on the west coast and the Timor and Arafura Seas in the north. Concatenated sequence data from 86 contemporary G. cuvier samples revealed 12 haplotypes to use for population structure analysis. Analysis of molecular variance identified significant population structure between East and West (Φ ST = 0.07879, P <0.05) and between West and North (ΦST = 0.07989, P <0.05). Genetic diversity at the control region was higher in the West than the East in both modern and historical samples; however, a temporal decline in diversity on the east (Historic; h=0.262, p=0.00403 and Modern; h=0.152, p=0.00027) was identified using invaluable information from historical DNA. Overall genetic diversity was low compared to other shark species.This study is among the first to provide crucial baseline data concerning the genetic status of tiger sharks in Australian waters. The presented findings may have significant implications for fisheries management and conservation of G. cuvier given the evidence of low and declining genetic diversity in eastern Australian waters. 80 Climate impacts and adaptation options for Australian fisheries – 25 years of progress Alistair Hobday1 1. CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, Hobart, TAS, Australia Interest and research on the effects of climate change on Australian fish and fisheries has at least a 25 years history. Here I review the progress over that time, focusing on a set of recommendations made at one of the first government-sponsored workshops addressing climate concerns. The major issues were identified very early in the research history, and relatively, few additional issues have been identified since that time. Progress in some areas has been as expected, while in others, we are still grappling with the same ones. Recent research in Australia is leading the way internationally, and overall, the prospects for adaptation are founded on sound science, with a range of options that mean radical transformation in Australian fisheries is not likely for the next 25 years. 81 Key principles for undertaking marine research that enables knowledge exchange and evidence-based decision-making Christopher Cvitanovic1, Jan McDonald1, Alistair Hobday2, Kelly Waples3, Peter Barnes4 1. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. CSIRO, Hobart 3. Department of Parks and Wildlife, Perth 4. Department of Parks and Wildlife, Exmouth The conservation and sustainable management of the marine environment requires knowledge exchange among scientists and decision-makers to enable learning and support evidence-based decision-making. Efforts to improve knowledge exchange have often been hindered by a paucity of empirically-grounded guidance to help scientists and practitioners implement research programs that actively facilitate knowledge exchange. To address this, we evaluated the Ningaloo Research Program (NRP), which was designed to generate new scientific knowledge to support evidence-based decisions about the management of the Ningaloo Marine Park in north-western Australia. Specifically, we evaluated (1) program outcomes, including the extent to which new knowledge informed management decisions; (2) the barriers that prevented knowledge exchange among scientists and managers; (3) the key requirements for improving knowledge exchange processes in the future; and (4) the core capacities that are required to support knowledge exchange processes. We found that while the NRP generated expansive and diverse science outputs directly relevant to the management of the Ningaloo Marine Park, very little has been integrated into decision-making processes. Based on our findings we identify a set of principles that should be implemented as part of any applied research program, including; (i) stakeholder mapping prior to the commencement of research programs to identify all stakeholders, (ii) research questions to be co-developed by all stakeholders, (iii) implementation of participatory research approaches, (iv) use of a knowledge broker, and (v) tailored knowledge management systems. We also identify the key individual, institutional and financial capacities that must be developed to underpin successful knowledge exchange strategies. 82 Evaluating how the Murray-Darling Basin Plan is helping native fish Katie Ryan1 1. Murray-Darling Basin Authority, Canberra, ACT, Australia In 2017 five years will have swum by since implementation of one of Australia’s most significant and controversial water reform policies, the Murray-Darling Basin Plan. This milestone brings expectation of an evaluation, which if done robustly will ease anxieties and demonstrate the value of the policy as well as identify knowledge gaps and adaptive management opportunities. However, evaluating how the Basin Plan is contributing to sustainable outcomes for native fish populations on a Basin wide scale involves numerous complexities and requires much more than just analysis of monitoring data against Basin Plan targets for fish. Life history requirements, factors external to water reform, ecological time lags and spatial variability are all being considered when teasing out how the Basin Plan is making a difference. Understanding the level of confidence in the relationship between flow and life history requirements and the likelihood and potential impact of external factors is critical, as is an understanding of the management actions that have taken place as a direct result of implementation of the Plan. Thus, this evaluation is a challenging yet exciting space where an understanding of science and management actions must intersect to ensure that the evaluation is robust and meaningful to a public audience. 83 Using anglers to survey Murray cod: What’s the catch? Patrick Ross-Magee1 1. University of Canberra, Canberra, ACT, Australia Murray cod (Maccullochella peelii) are a nationally listed threatened species, as well as the most sought-after recreational freshwater angling species in south-eastern Australia. Murray cod are well studied in the lowlands of the MDB, however little research is conducted in upland environments. This is in part because of the difficulty in using traditional survey methods (electrofishing) in the rocky, high gradient and narrow gorge country of upland rivers. With growing confidence in citizen science, and increasing interest from recreational anglers to be involved in the management of their fishery, there is an opportunity to develop novel cost-effective volunteer sampling techniques. This study used 24 volunteer anglers across 6 longterm monitoring sites in the upper Murrumbidgee River in the ACT, to capture and tag Murray cod during 3 events in 2015/16. Immediately following the angling surveys, researchers conducted boat electrofishing surveys allowing a capture efficiency comparison of the two sampling techniques. The mark-recapture data was also used to estimate site population. Across all 3 sampling events, 48 Murray cod were captured by anglers in 724 hours, while 149 Murray cod were captured by electrofishing in 37 hours. Angled fish length ranged from 295mm to 1140mm (median = 632.5mm), while electrofishing captured fish ranging from 82mm to 1075mm (median = 349mm). 51 fish (34.2%) captured by electrofishing were juvenile Murray cod under the minimum length of all angled fish. Although angling is a less efficient capture method, when used in conjunction with traditional survey techniques it could provide the basis for increasing the scope and frequency of future monitoring programs, particularly in upland rivers. 84 What's the future for the small, threatened wetland fish Nannoperca australis (southern pygmy perch)? Charles R Todd1, John D Koehn1, Luke Pearce2, John R Morrongiello3, Lauren Dodd1, Paul Humphries4 1. Arthur Rylah Institute, Department of Environment Land Water and Planning, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia 2. NSW Fisheries, Albury, NSW, Australia 3. School of BioSciences, Melbourne University, Parkville, Victoria, Australia 4. School of Environmental Sciences, Charles Sturt University, Thurgoona, NSW, Australia Small fish species that have no commercial value are often overlooked in conservation management, despite serious concerns about their long-term future. The Nannoperca australis (southern pygmy perch) of temperate south eastern Australia is representative of many small freshwater fishes. We develop a structured population model for this species to assess risk of localised extinction and assist in the decision making for their conservation management in NSW, Australia. The objectives of this study were threefold: to develop a stochastic population model for Nannoperca australis; to determine what constitutes a viable population for the species; and to use the model to provide guidance for the establishment of new populations, assess the impacts on donor populations, and consider other conservation management actions. The model was sensitive to the estimation of early life history survival for which there are no estimates from field data. Given uncertainty in some vital rates, the modelling indicates that a population in stable habitat that would be expected to support 2000 female adults would be likely to be viable and able to withstand some disturbance and possibly be used as a source population for reintroductions, however it was found that with multiple disturbances and being used as a source population generates an 7.9% risk or extinction. A larger stable habitat expected to support 8000 females with multiple disturbances and being used as a source population generates a 2.4% risk of extinction. A stable habitat expect to support 500 female adults may not be viable as multiple disturbances together with being used as a source population generates a substantial risk of extinction of 24% and a very high probability of being small, Pr(minimum population size ≤ 25) = 71%. If suitable habitat can be found or established, releasing 1000 female adults over 5 years would likely result in the establishment of a viable population. The model allows for a variety of reintroduction strategies to be tested as well as other management options. This type of approach can be used to improve the conservation management of many similar species worldwide. 85 Elevation and waterfalls structure fish assemblages in short-steep-coastal-streams Brendan C Ebner1, James A Donaldson2, Helen Murphy3, Paul Thuesen4, Andrew Ford3, Jason Schaffer5 1. CSIRO and TropWATER, JCU, Atherton, QLD, Australia 2. TropWATER, James Cook University, Atherton, QLD, Australia 3. CSIRO, Land & Water, Atherton, QLD, Australia 4. Formerly: James Cook University, Cairns, QLD, Australia 5. TropWATER, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia Elevation gradients including abrupt barriers such as cascades and waterfalls, are known to shape the composition of amphidromous fish assemblages in tropical Pacific streams. We aimed to describe the structuring of fish assemblages in shortsteep-coastal-streams (SSCS) of the Australian Wet Tropics by snorkeling continuous lengths of three streams from the upper tidal limit to the source. Greatest species richness consistently occurred in the lower course of streams, and while elevational generalists were observed (Sicyopterus lagocephalus, Anguilla spp.) a number of elevational specialists, primarily sicydiine gobies, were exclusively found in the mid to upper course. Subsequently, species assemblages were identified and used to disentangle elevation and barrier effects on faunal distribution based on natural differences in stream profile. We also provide preliminary evidence that the stream profile dictates the upstream limits of keystone diurnal predators capable of ascending cascades and a subset of waterfalls, and that in turn this has implications for top-down effects on prawns and shrimps. We conclude that the detection and mapping of sicydiine gobies poses a challenge for comprehensive conservation planning and protection of regional fish diversity in SSCS of the Australian Wet Tropics. 86 At the junction where predators, temperate reefs and marine resource management interact Natasha A Hardy1, Brendan P Kelaher2, Renata Ferrari1, Melinda Coleman3, Tina E Berry4, Michael Bunce4, Georgina Wood1, Gwenael Cadiou5, Simon D Goldsworthy6, Bronwyn Gillanders7, Sean D Connell7, Will F Figueira1 1. School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia 2. Centre for Coastal Biogeochemistry Research, National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University, Coffs Harbour, New South Wales, Australia 3. Department of Primary Industries, National Marine Science Centre,, NSW Fisheries, Coffs Harbour, New South Wales, Australia 4. Trace and Environmental DNA (TrEnD) Laboratory, Department of Environment & Agriculture, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia 5. School of Environment, University of Technology, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia 6. South Australian Research and Development Institute, Henley Beach, South Australia, Australia 7. School of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia Recovering populations of large predators are indicative of productive ecosystems, and also bring with them crucial ecosystem services and oft cascading trophic effects to biological communities. Understanding the role of predators in shaping ecosystem processes is critical for effective marine resource management and therefore ecosystem conservation, a critical issue on highly populated and human-impacted coastal areas. We investigated the trophic dynamics of two sympatric predators, Australian and long-nosed fur seals, using DNA metabarcoding techniques to analyse their diets across multiple locations of recolonisation on the south coast of NSW. To evaluate the potential for localised effects of predator aggregation sites on fish and temperate reef communities, we also undertook surveys at fur seal haul-out sites and sites of relatively low fur seal activity. We found considerable overlap of key prey groups in the diets of both seal species across sampling time at the most peripheral haul-out site (Jervis Bay) and strong trophic linkages with coastal ecosystems due to the high prevalence of benthic, demersal and reefassociated prey. In contrast, diet composition of both seal species from the breeding colony (Montague Island) were more consistent with foraging patterns for both species from more central parts of their geographic range. These results suggest there may be different trophic interactions at newly recolonised sites compared to established colonies, with different outcomes for marine communities and which may impact the way that we manage dynamic species and communities. We detected some localised effects of fur seal haul-out sites on temperate reef communities, however, effects were not as strong as expected, indicating that local initiatives for marine resource management are not necessarily severely compromised by recovering populations of predators. Finally, there was considerable overlap in predator diets with important fisheries on the east coast of Australia, highlighting a need to better evaluate this overlap and complex trophic interactions between multiple key players in ecosystem processes. 87 Trophic ecology of coral trout: Is one sampling approach enough? Jordan K Matley1, Colin A Simpfendorfer1, Aaron T Fisk2, Andrew J Tobin1, Floriaan Devloo-Delva1, Gregory Maes1, Michelle R Heupel1, 3 1. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture , James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, University of Windsor, Windsor, Ontario, Canada 3. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, QLD, Australia Understanding the ecological role and associated behaviours of aquatic animals is often difficult because sampling techniques have inherent limitations. The goal of this study was to explore how different sampling approaches (passive acoustic telemetry and dietary proxies) can be used in conjunction to provide a more refined account of fish behaviour. Fifty-eight acoustic receivers were deployed at three reefs to monitor the movements of an economically significant species group – coral trout (Plectropomus spp.; n≈150 individuals). Additionally, gut content identification (visual - n≈200 and genetic - n≈100) and stable isotope analysis (n≈120 x three tissues) were completed over a two-year period to assess species-specific differences in feeding ecology. By using multiple approaches, we found that broad resource and habitat selection trends differ between sympatric species, but interestingly, the way they differ is unique to each species pairing. For example, at offshore reefs the space use of P. laevis overlapped with P. leopardus, and they consumed distinct prey; while at inshore reefs, the space use of P. maculatus had little overlap with P. leopardus, and they consumed similar prey. These findings demonstrate the value of using complimentary sampling approaches to explore fish behaviour. 88 Extreme inverted trophic pyramid of reef sharks supported by spawning groupers Johann Mourier1, Jeffrey A. Maynard2, Valeriano Parravicini2, Laurent Ballesta3, Eric Clua2, Michael Domeier4, Serge Planes2 1. Macquarie University, Marsfield, NSW, Australia 2. EPHE, PSL Research University, UPVD, CNRS, USR 3278 CRIOBE, Perpignan, France 3. Andromede Oceanology, Carson, France 4. Marine Conservation Science Institute, St Waikoloa, Hawaii The extent of the global human footprint limits our understanding of what is natural in the marine environment. Remote nearpristine areas provide some baseline expectations for biomass and suggest that predators dominate, producing an ‘inverted biomass pyramid’. The southern pass of Fakarava atoll – a Biosphere Reserve in French Polynesia – hosts an average of 600 reef sharks, 2-3 times the biomass/ha documented for any other reef shark aggregations. This huge biomass of predators makes the trophic pyramid inverted. Bioenergetics models indicate the sharks require ~ 90 tons of fish/year while the total fish production in the pass is ~ 17 tons/year. Energetic theory shows that such trophic structure is maintained through subsidies and empirical evidence suggests sharks must engage in wide ranging foraging excursions to meet energy needs. We used underwater surveys and acoustic telemetry to assess shark residency in the pass and feeding behavior, and bioenergetics models to understand energy flow. Contrary to previous findings, our results highlight that sharks may overcome low local energy availability by feeding on fish spawning aggregations which concentrate energy from other local trophic pyramids. Fish spawning aggregations are known to be targeted by sharks, but were previously believed to play a minor role representing occasional opportunistic supplements. This research demonstrates fish spawning aggregations can play a significant role in the maintenance of local inverted pyramids in pristine marine areas. Conserving fish spawning aggregations can help conserve shark populations, especially if combined with shark fishing bans. 89 The trophic impact of an estuarine pelagic fish: a bioenergetics approach Christopher Lawson1, 2, Stephanie Brodie1, 2, Iain Suthers1, 2, Hayden Schilling1, 2 1. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, UNSW, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2. Sydney Institute of Marine Science, Sydney, NSW, Australia Consumption rates are central to understanding the trophic dynamics of an ecosystem. The consumption rates of many pelagic predators are unknown, despite their importance as ecosystem regulators and fisheries resources. We present a bioenergetics model that estimates the consumption rates of a juvenile pelagic predator, tailor (Pomatomus saltatrix), during its obligate estuarine phase. Using metabolic rate to parameterise the bioenergetics model, we determined the effect of body size and temperature on the metabolic rate of tailor. Laboratory respirometry trials were used to measure the routine metabolic rate (RMR; mgO2 kg-1 hr-1) of varying-sized tailor at 18, 21, 24, 27 and 30°C. The mass-specific RMR of tailor ranged from 135.9 mgO2 kg-1 hr-1 at 18 °C, to 395.9 mgO2 kg-1 hr-1 at 30 °C (mean body size of 80g). RMR increased exponentially with temperature, with the Q10 estimated at 2.43. A linear regression between body mass and RMR was similar to previous generalised models of metabolic theory, with a scaling exponent of -0.24. The bioenergetics model estimated the energetic costs of metabolic and growth rates in relation to body mass, water temperature, and prey type. A juvenile tailor during its ontogenetic estuarine phase needs to consume at least 3% of its body weight daily. The bioenergetics model uses estimates of tailor biomass and mortality rates to scale to population size, thereby quantifying the trophic impact of tailor in the estuarine system. Altering model parameters such as temperature, biomass, and prey, integrates the seasonal and latitudinal variation of estuaries along eastern Australia. The results of these model perturbations will be discussed. This bioenergetics model can be used to inform fisheries management of coastal resources, as well as gain insight into the trophic dynamics of estuarine ecosystems. 90 Trout in a New Zealand river: Disturbers of the trophic peace or not? Adam Canning1, Russell Death1 1. Institute of Agriculture and Environment - Ecology, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand Brown Trout (Salmo trutta) are a game fish that have been introduced all over the world, including New Zealand, to the joy of many freshwater anglers. However, they are not loved by all camps with many arguing that they cause trophic cascades that reduce ecosystem health and make rivers very green. This study investigates the relationship between brown trout and the food web within a popular river in New Zealand’s capital city. We make use of a long term monitoring dataset to assess trophic patterns over time and assess whether changes are driven environmental or biological factors. We then assemble and use a quantitative food web model to simulate the effects of trout density on food web structure. 91 Physical and biological changes during the filling of a temperate upland reservoir following its enlargement Sally Hatton1, Fiona Dyer1, Mark Lintermans1 1. University of Canberra, Canberra, ACT, Australia Human population growth in a changing climate and subsequent increase in water demands have resulted in proposals for many dams to be built, enlarged or refurbished. Recently, the value of reservoirs as refuges for threatened fish species has been highlighted, but the trophic and biotic interactions that occur in reservoirs need to be understood if they are going to be successfully managed as fish refuges. Recently Cotter Dam, in south-eastern Australia, was enlarged to twenty times its previous capacity. This offered a unique opportunity to investigate changes in water quality, invertebrates, fish diet and food web as the reservoir was in its initial filling stage. Sampling occurred in the early to mid-stage of the reservoir filling. Water quality data, in particular nitrogen and phosphorus, were collected in autumn and spring, with supplementary data supplied by the water owner. Micro- and macro- invertebrates were sampled in autumn and spring, along with Macquarie perch (Macquaria australasica) and rainbow trout diet (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and stable isotope sampling (δ13C and δ15N). We found that, during the early filling stage, nutrients in the reservoir increased, as did microinvertebrates. Macroinvertebrates remained stable in the initial filling stages. Initially, fish diet changed from aquatic invertebrates to terrestrial items, particularly terrestrial oligochaetes. By mid-filling there was a shift back to aquatic invertebrates and an increase in piscivory in trout. Stable isotope analysis showed how the importance of terrestrial inputs changed throughout the filling stage. Understanding the impact that enlargement of reservoirs has on fish diet and prey availability is important, as changes in food availability may affect fish condition, and potentially their reproductive output. Knowledge gained from this project may be used to enhance future management decisions surrounding reservoir filling and its implications for native freshwater fish species. 92 An alternative explanation for global trends in thermal tolerance Nicholas L Payne1, James A Smith2 1. National Institute of Polar Research, Tokyo, Japan 2. University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia Ectotherms from higher latitudes can generally perform over broader temperature ranges than tropical ectotherms. This pattern is thought to reflect trends in temperature variability: tropical ectotherms evolve to be ‘thermal specialists’ because their environment is thermally stable. However, the tropics are also hotter, and most physiological rates increase exponentially with temperature. Using a dataset spanning diverse ectotherms, we show that the temperature ranges marine and terrestrial ectotherms tolerate (the difference between lower and upper critical temperatures, and between optimum and upper critical temperatures) generally represents the same range of equivalent biological rates (e.g. metabolism) for cool and warm adapted species, and regardless of latitude. This suggests latitudinal trends in temperature variability may not be the ultimate mechanism underlying latitudinal trends in thermal tolerance. Rather, we propose that the reason tropical ectotherms can perform over a narrower range of temperatures than species from higher latitudes is because the tropics are hotter. 93 Hypoxia tolerance in fish: assessing phenotypic diversity and temporal repeatability among populations Geoffrey M Collins1, Alexander G Carton1, Timothy D Clark2 1. School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia 2. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia Publish consent withheld 94 Efficiency and versatility underpin the global ecological success of a single fish genus in extreme coral reef habitats Christopher Fulton1, Peter Wainwright2, Andrew Hoey3, David Bellwood3 1. Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia 2. Evolution & Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA, USA 3. ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia Phenotypic innovations can allow organisms to relax abiotic selection and facilitate their ecological success in challenging habitats, yet we have relatively little evidence for this phenomenon at macroecological scales. We examined the relative abundance of coral reef wrasses and parrotfishes (f. Labridae) across three ocean basins and the Red Sea to reveal the consistent global dominance of extreme wave-swept habitats by a single fish genus - Thalassoma - which had abundances up to 15 times higher than any other sympatric labrid. Winged pectoral fins were a key part of this global success, since numerical dominance by Thalassoma was contingent upon the presence of high intensity wave energy where winged fins allow for efficient locomotion. Notably, the extent of ecological success varied with species richness and the presence of congeneric competitors. While many fish taxa have evolved winged pectoral fins, Thalassoma appears to have combined efficient high-speed swimming (to relax abiotic selection) with trophic versatility (to maximise exploitation of rich resources) to exploit and dominate extreme coral reef habitats around the world. 95 Mechanistic understanding of climate driven range shifts: using thermal tolerances of rock lobster to predict future range shifts Samantha Twiname1, Quinn Fitzgibbon1, Alistair Hobday2, Chris Carter1, Gretta Pecl1 1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Private Bag 49, Hobart, Tasmania 2. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Castray Esplanade, Hobart, Tasmania Ocean warming is affecting marine species worldwide, with one of the most observed changes being alterations to species geographical distributions. Understanding what drives these range shifts is key to predicting what may happen with future warming. This study takes a mechanistic approach to understanding climate-driven range shifts, looking at the metabolic and escape responses of spiny rock lobster and how they may change under different temperature scenarios. We examined the metabolic physiology and escape response of the puerulus and juvenile stages of Jasus edwardsii, a common Tasmanian species of spiny rock lobster, and Sagmariasus verreauxi, a species of spiny rock lobster extending its range into and further south in Tasmania. The puerulus stage of the spiny rock lobster life cycle is an important transitional stage between the larval and juvenile stages and understanding how ocean warming may affect their aerobic and swimming capacity allows us to better predict future scenarios of population dynamics. Jasus edwardsii individuals of both life stages were tested at 16, 18, 20, 22, 24 and 26°C, and S. verreauxi individuals were tested at 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30°C. Intermittent flow respirometry was used to determine aerobic scope (AS), excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC) and recovery times. Escape velocities were determined from high speed stereo-video footage. The comparison between the physiologies of the two species indicates that S. verreauxi have higher thermal tolerances than J. edwardsii, and this may facilitate further expansion of this range-shifting species into Tasmanian waters with future ocean warming. 96 Is acclimation achievable? Long-term effects of combined hypoxia and temperature exposure on three freshwater fish. Kayla L Gilmore1, Zoe A Doubleday, Bronwyn M Gillanders 1. Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, School of Biological Sciences and Environment Institute, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia Research on the physiological thresholds of fish to hypoxia and temperature have focussed on short-term tolerances (<96 hours), with few researchers testing longer term exposures. Furthermore, fish exposed to persistent low levels of dissolved oxygen may be able to acclimate over time. Juvenile golden perch (Macquaria ambigua ambigua), silver perch (Bidyanus bidyanus) and Murray cod (Maccullochella peelii), key native freshwater species in the Murray Darling Basin, were acclimated for a longer time than generally used (30+ days) to different temperatures (20, 24 and 28°C) crossed with normal (6-8mg L-1) and hypoxic conditions (3-4mg L-1). Acclimation ability of Murray cod was also tested after 7 and 14 days of hypoxia exposure. Responses to hypoxia and thermal stress were measured for behaviour, mortality during the acclimation period and aerobic capacity (using resting respirometry). Murray cod and golden perch exhibited high tolerances to hypoxia during behavioural tests, while, silver perch did not survive more than 3 weeks exposure during the initial acclimation period. Longer term exposure to hypoxia improved the tolerances of golden perch during behavioural tests, however, Murray cod typically exhibited poorer tolerances the longer they were acclimated. Murray cod were most tolerant to hypoxia at the lowest temperature (20°C) and shortest exposure time. While prior exposure to hypoxia may allow fish to cope with hypoxic conditions better in the long-term, a short acclimation time resulted in the greatest tolerances for this study, suggesting resilience to hypoxia might decrease as a function of exposure time. Observed species-specific responses illustrate the need to consider tolerances and acclimation abilities of known sensitive species within a system to prevent mass mortalities of fish through better management of waterways. 97 Adaptive divergence in swimming performance and body shape of river and isolated reservoir populations of Australian smelt (Retropinna semoni) Daniel P Svozil1 1. Charles Sturt University, Lavington, NSW, Australia Modification of river systems through reservoir construction has given rise to altered ecosystems, characterised as slow flowing or still-water habitats. Fish populations isolated in reservoirs can exhibit adaptive divergence from the source population and flow velocity may be an important driver of this divergence, leading over time to functional and morphological trait changes. Several studies have demonstrated that fish from populations living in still and flowing habitats are substantially different in average body shape. It is widely assumed that selection favours body shapes that confer optimum swimming ability in a particular environment, thereby enhancing a population’s fitness and persistence. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that variation in body shape predicts divergence in swimming performance between river and isolated reservoir populations of Australian smelt (Retropinna semoni). Fish were sampled from 6 rivers and 6 reservoirs across South Eastern Australia. Geometric morphometric analysis of 16 homologous landmarks was used to compare average body shape among these populations, while swimming performance was assessed using the critical swimming speed (U-crit) test to determine if body shape was a predictor of swimming performance. River and reservoir populations of Australian smelt had significant differences in swimming performance. However, geometric morphometric analysis revealed that body shape of fish did not consistently differ between river and reservoir populations. These results indicate that morphology does not necessarily predict swimming performance and other physiological factors may be involved in determining swimming performance. This study provides insights into the relationship between morphology and swimming performance of Australian smelt living under different extremes of flow velocity. The role of swimming performance in life-sustaining activities and the potential microevolutionary consequences of human-induced habitat modification are discussed. 98 Love between my brothers and my sisters, all over this river. Alan Couch1, Fiona Dyer1, Mark Lintermans1 1. Institute for Applied Ecology, University Of Canberra, ACT, Australia Analysis of many single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPS) identified using a genome reduction technique and next generation sequencing (NGS) can provide good quality cost effective estimates of a pair of individuals being a full sibling, half sibling, or a parent-offspring dyad in a sufficiently large group of conspecifics. If that set is temporally constrained to a set that cannot include parents or offspring, we can infer, with a high degree of certainty, full sibling or half sibling status. If this is combined with appropriate meta-data a novel and useful way of studying movement, population and mating strategies inter alia, becomes available. In this study we calculate sibling status of 243 Murray Cod larvae from a 60 km reach of the upper Murrumbidgee River, from years 2011-2013, and use associated meta-data to infer details about mating strategy, dispersal, and the correlation of biogeochemical signatures in larval otolith cores with relatedness. 99 How low do we go- the challenge of passing juvenile fish upstream in sub-tropical/tropical Australia. Tim Marsden1, Andrew Berghuis2, Claire Peterken 1. AFPS, Shoal Point, QLD, Australia 2. Aquatic Biopassage Services, Bundaberg, QLd, Australia The provision of fish passage in Australia has traditionally focussed on adult and sub-adult fish of a number of iconic species such as murray cod, golden perch, barramundi and mullet. However, there are a wide range of other species whose post lavae juveniles are undertaking upstream migrations from estuarine habitats into lowland freshwater habitats in Queensland. Species such as empire gudgeons, long-finned eels, bony bream, anchovies, mangrove jack, striped mullet and barramundi have juveniles that are very small when entering freshwater. These fish are often encountering barriers when they are as small as 8mm long, with their successful passage crucial to reducing predation rates and maximising productivity of the species. In extreme cases barriers can completely block these life stages and lead to a collapse in the species populations within a catchment. Providing passage for these extremely small fish has required a rethink of traditional fish passage options, with a focus on very low turbulence and roughened fishways that cater for the micro habitats that these fish use to move upstream. We outline the options available for provision of fish passage for these fish and how they have successfully have been used at sites throughout Queensland. 100 Cue but no follow- through: the challenge of movement opportunity in the northern Murray-Darling Basin Kate Hodges1, Ryan Woods1 1. Department of Science, Information Technology and Innovation, Brisbane, QLD, Australia In dryland river systems fish are isolated in waterholes and can only undertake longitudinal movement during flow events and subsequent reconnection. These events may provide cues for fish to move, but flow regime modification and artificial barriers severely reduce movement opportunities. We are investigating what flow attributes both cue fish movement, and provide opportunity for that movement to be realised in the lower Balonne system of the northern Murray-Darling Basin. We use an acoustic telemetry array to track movements of 240 individuals of carp, yellowbelly (Macquaria ambigua), spangled perch (Leiopotherapon unicolor), and Hyrtl’s tandan (Neosilurus hyrtlii). During no-flow conditions local-scale (2-10 km) movement was significant, with some individuals continuously moving throughout the length of a waterhole. Recruitment of yellowbelly and spangled perch was also recorded. A late summer flow provided opportunity for larger-scale movement, but the majority of tagged fish remained in their starting waterhole during the event. Hyrtl’s tandan however migrated up to 40 km upstream on the flow, and returned to their original location in the same week the flow subsided. There was no clear upstream or downstream preference for carp or spangled perch, but some carp moved large distances downstream (>100km). We discuss the implications of these results for population connectivity and recolonization of habitats in intermittently flowing rivers, and examine the question of how flows for fish movement can provide both cue and opportunity in a modified system. Results will inform water resource planning in the lower Balonne floodplain. 101 Designing fishways for floodplain species of the Lower Mekong Basin Lee Baumgartner1, Douangkham Singhanouvong2, Garry Thorncraft3, Tim Marsden4, Oudom Phonekhampheng3 1. Charles Sturt University, Thurgoona, NSW, Australia 2. Living Aquatic Resources Research Centre, Vientiane, Lao PDR 3. National University of Laos, Vientiane, Lao PDR 4. Australasian Fish Passage Services, Mackay, Queensland, Australia River development in Lao P.D.R. has led to construction of numerous water regulation devices (over 10,000) which limit migratory fish movement. Movements of fish (and other aquatic animals) between rivers and floodplains is subsequently restricted, or may be entirely prevented, and this has led to severe declines in fish production in many areas. Fish-passage technology has the potential to enable movement of migratory fish past these low-level (less than 6 m) barriers. Consequently, fisheries agencies are interested in increasing capacity to design, manage and operate fish passage facilities on new and existing low-level water control structures. The first fishway in Lao P.D.R. was constructed and assessed at a wetland regulator between 2011 and 2014. Over 170 species, from a range of size classes, were captured within the fishway. Many species successfully recolonised a wetland which had been previously disconnected by regulator construction. But not all species were able to ascend, and local hydrology substantially impacted fishway effectiveness. These observations suggests that fishways may be an important tool for increasing fisheries productivity in the Lower Mekong Basin. But capturing a high number of migratory species, with a range of different swimming abilities, indicates that strategies to suit all fish will require diverse and flexible solutions. 102 Migration phenology and biomass estimation of upstream migrating prawn (Macrobrachium spinipes) in a tropical north Australian river Peter A Novak1, Michael M Douglas2, Bradley Pusey2, Erica A Garcia 1, Peter Bayliss3, David Crook1 1. Charles Darwin University, DARWIN, NT, Australia 2. University of Western Australia , Perth, WA 3. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Brisbane The amphidromous river prawn, Macrobrachium spinipes (known locally as cherabin) is a large bodied and abundant tropical prawn species occuring throughout northern Australia. The species supports a significant recreational fishery and is a critical prey species for predators a such as Lates calcarifer. We investigated the upstream migration of Macrobrachium spinipes in the Daly River, Northern Territory, to determine migration phenology, estimate migration biomass and if the migrating shrimps were transporting marine derived carbon upstream. Monthly observations and sweep net sampling over two years revealed that the migration of juvenile M. spinipes occurred during extended periods of declining discharge during the wet season and specifically, occurred en-mass after the wet season, when stream discharge was returning to base flow. The en-mass migration occurred over a period of 4-6 weeks between MarchMay. This period was targeted for fine scale sampling using fyke nets. Analysis of environmental descriptors and migration biomass consistently found discharge as the strongest predictor of biomass, while moon illumination and cloud cover were also found to be significant predictors. An estimated 15-20 million shrimp migrated upstream during the period, transporting approximately 100 kg of carbon and 28 kg of nitrogen. Two different methods were trialled to determine if marine carbon was transported upstream; sulphur stable isotopes and strontium isotope ratios. No evidence of marine carbon was found through either method employed. While we found little evidence the migration of the amphidromous prawns was transporting marine derived energy and nutrients upstream, the migration was providing millions of individuals that likely constitute an important process subsidy to the river system. 103 Rehabilitating passage for migrating Galaxias (family: Galaxiidae) through a 70 m pipe-culvert Frank Amtstaetter1, Justin O'Connor1, Dan Borg, Ivor Stuart1, Paul Moloney1 1. Arthur Rylah Institute for Environmental Research, Heidelberg, VIC, Australia Movement through streams is critical for the maintenance of diadromous fish populations. Numerous fish passage improvement techniques exist and managers require knowledge of their effectiveness to conserve diadromous species. The passage success of young-of-year (YOY) Galaxias sp. through a pipe-culvert was monitored using a mark-recapture technique, before and following the creation of a pool within the culvert, to investigate whether fish passage improved compared to a control site. A lateral ridge rock-ramp fishway was installed downstream of the culvert to decrease water velocity within the culvert and baffles were installed in the upstream portion of the culvert to provide refuge from higher water velocity at this location. The passage success of YOY Galaxias sp. increased following these treatments to similar levels observed at a control site. Field evaluation and demonstration of the effectiveness of the fishway and baffles on a 70 m culvert provides managers with an important case-study to further adopt this technique to improve fish passage on a broader scale and fills a knowledge gap in the primary literature relating to the success of this technique. 104 Science informs restoration of a fragmented ecosystem: a fish passage case study from an estuarine barrage Chris Bice1, BrentonBrenton Zampatti1, Martin Mallen-Cooper2 1. SARDI Aquatic Sciences, West Beach, SA, Australia 2. Fishway Consulting Services, NSW Dams, weirs, barrages and a multitude of other regulating structures fragment riverine and estuarine ecosystems, and obstruct the movement of fish. Fishways are used worldwide to facilitate fish movement and partially mitigate the impact of barriers. Implementing effective fish passage is reliant on knowledge of migratory fish, including spatio-temporal patterns of movement, behaviour and physiology. The early history of fishway construction in Australia provides numerous examples of fishways that were designed in the absence of such scientific knowledge, and consequently, resulted in ineffective structures. The Murray Barrages, at the terminus of the Murray-Darling Basin, are long (7.6 km collectively), low-level (~1 m) structures that separate the freshwater Lower Lakes from the Coorong Estuary and Southern Ocean, and represent significant barriers to fish movement. From 2003 to the present, the barrages have been the subject of substantial investment in fish passage, with a total of 11 fishways either completed or under construction. Throughout this period, monitoring and research have greatly improved knowledge of migratory fishes and fishway function at the site, leading to refinements in models of fish movement and fishway hydraulics. Ultimately, this has led to improved fishway design, as well as more environmentally sensitive operation of the barrages. Whilst the collection of scientific data was fundamental in achieving this outcome, the dissemination of this information and collaboration between scientists, natural resource managers, engineers and river operators was equally important. We provide a summary of the science used to inform fish passage at the Murray Barrages with a focus on the importance of collaborative relationships and lessons learned throughout. 105 Fish need water: Developing and delivering flows for fish Anthony Townsend1, Katherine Cheshire2, Iain Ellis3, Craig Copeland4, Liz Webb2 1. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Fisheries NSW, Tamworth, NSW, Australia 2. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Fisheries NSW, Queanbeyan, NSW, Australia 3. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Fisheries NSW, Buronga, NSW, Australia 4. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Fisheries NSW, Wollongbar, NSW, Australia The majority of native fish populations in the Murray-Darling Basin are in a poor condition. Planning processes currently being developed as part of Basin Plan implementation provide the opportunity to improve flow regimes and contribute to the restoration of native fish populations. To effectively manage water for native fish, we need to understand the flow drivers that support healthy fish populations. The Fish and Flows projects completed by NSW DPI-Fisheries used the latest management and scientific information to develop an understanding of the relationships between hydrology, life history requirements and population dynamics for native fish. As part of this process, native fish were classified into flow related functional groups based on the biological, hydrological and hydraulic requirements needed for spawning, recruitment, movement and maintenance outcomes. Using this information, a management framework was developed, defining the ecologically significant components of the flow regime and the life history outcomes they supported for different fish groups. The use of this framework at regional scales, in combination with site specific information, will guide water management decisions that support the recovery of native fish in a healthy working Basin. 106 Sometimes fish need more than water: Supporting flow management with complementary actions to enhance fish outcomes Iain Ellis1, Katherine Cheshire2, Anthony Townsend3, Craig Copeland4, Liz Webb5 1. DPI Fisheries NSW, Buronga, NSW, Australia 2. DPI Fisheries NSW, Queanbeyan, NSW, Australia 3. DPI Fisheries NSW, Tamworth, NSW, Australia 4. DPI Fisheries NSW, Wollongbar, NSW, Australia 5. DPI Fisheries NSW, Queanbeyan, NSW, Australia Water is the most fundamental requirement for fish; however fish won’t survive unless their habitat, food, and life-cycle requirements are also met. Environmental flows can contribute to restoring more natural flow regimes and variability within aquatic habitats. They can also increase connectivity, enhance productivity and improve water quality. The potential to achieve more sustainable long-term ecological outcomes through improved water management may be further enhanced by undertaking parallel complementary actions that address additional threats to native fish. These additional activities include (amongst others) habitat restoration and enhancement (e.g. re-snagging, instream and riparian zone management); mitigating cold water pollution or hypoxic black water impacts; improving fish passage and connectivity; screening diversions to minimise fish entrainment; pest species control, and; conservation stocking or translocations in cases where native species are unlikely or unable to recolonise rehabilitated habitats. As part of recent water management activities, NSW DPI Fisheries staff are trialing a range of associated complementary actions including manipulation of wetland hydrology, inlet screening (to exclude colonisation by adult carp, and thus improve water quality and promote macrophyte health) and stocking or translocation of native fish. These complementary actions aim to support native fish outcomes from improved environmental water management in the lower Murray River reaches of NSW. Some outcomes of these activities will be explored, demonstrating how native fish benefits can be enhanced by water managers, land managers and fish ecologists working together to return native fish to the Murray-Darling Basin. 107 Bush Blitz fish surveys across remote northern Australia: scientific discovery, management outcomes and community engagement Michael Hammer1, Glenn Moore2, Jeff Johnson3, Jo Harding4 1. Museum & Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin, NT, Australia 2. Department of Aquatic Zoology, Western Australian Museum, Welshpool, WA, Australia 3. Ichthyology, Queensland Museum, South Brisbane, Qld, Australia 4. Bush Blitz, Australian Biological Resources Study, Director of National Parks, Canberra, ACT, Australia Bush Blitz is a pioneering biodiversity discovery and knowledge program based on a cross-sector partnership of government, non-government organisations, industry and science (major partners are the Australian Government, BHP Billiton's Sustainable Communicates and Earthwatch). It involves a continent-wide multi-disciplinary survey program and a range of follow up taxonomic and educational programs aimed at better management, conservation and awareness of Australian fauna and flora. Some 29 Bush Blitz expeditions have been undertaken, including six across northern Australia which have included fish as a target group (2012–2015). These surveys occurred on large, remote and often very rugged areas of the central deserts (Henbury Station), Top End (Fish River Station, Wongalara Sanctuary, Judbarra-Gregory National Park), East Kimberley (Karunjie and Durack River stations) and Cape York (Olkola Country), across a combined area of some 3.7 million hectares! Freshwater fish diversity in Australia increases dramatically in the tropical north, and results to date indicate that there is still much to be documented in terms of the species baseline. The surveys recorded areas of significant fish biodiversity, identified several unique forms that may represent new species, uncovered important information on narrow range endemic species, collected high quality morphological and DNA material to contribute to broad systematic reviews of the Australian fish fauna, and developed imagery to help promote fishes and aquatic habitats. Indigenous rangers work alongside researchers in the field sharing knowledge and expertise. Information from surveys is provided back to land managers and traditional owners to assist with property management and feeds into public data portals such as the Atlas of Living Australia. School teachers also work alongside researchers teaching live back to their classrooms via Skype and online blogs as part of the Bush Blitz TeachLive program. Partnerships and engagement are a key part of the success of Bush Blitz. 108 Harnessing ecological knowledge to inform fish-flow management John Koehn1, Charles Todd1, Scott Raymond1, Stephen Balcombe2, Brenton Zampatti3, Ivor Stuart1 1. Arthur Rylah Institute, Heidelberg, VIC, Australia 2. Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith university, Brisbane 3. SARDI, Adelaide, SA, Australia There is always a need for the ‘best available science’ to inform environmental management. Getting it there, however, is another issue, and outdated data, knowledge, and ecological concepts can compromise the potential success of management actions. Within the Murray-Darling Basin (MDB), the Basin Plan and its watering strategy are being deployed for the rehabilitation of aquatic ecosystems. This is occurring at a speed rarely previously seen and is testing researchers and managers; especially in developing flow objectives and monitoring response. Rehabilitation of native fish populations is considered a primary goal of the Basin plan. To aid in the management of flow regimes for fish outcomes, contemporary and historical data have been collated, and conceptual and population models developed, to enable prediction and test outcomes within an Adaptive Management framework. This has occurred through literature searches, expert workshops (14 so far), talking, talking, talking (over 70 fish scientists and managers to date) to collect data, knowledge and experience to assist with model development. This process is being undertaken for nine native fish species of the MDB (Golden perch, Silver perch, Murray cod, Trout cod, Macquarie perch, Freshwater catfish, Southern pygmy perch, Olive perchlet, Murray hardyhead). In addition, we have also queried managers to determine what they want from researchers in relation to fish and flows. This can be summarised as: provision of robust, evidence-based information (research and monitoring) and timely, relevant advice in simple terms;; be prepared to ‘give things a go’; and have a proactive, collaborative approach to determining water management. Key knowledge gaps for research were also identified. Stronger concluding sentence? 109 Dams, rainfall, fires and fish: the links and opportunities for building resilience. Stephen Beatty1, Mark Allen2, David Morgan1, Alan Lymbery1 1. Murdoch University, Murdoch, WA, Australia 2. Western Australian Museum , Perth, Western Australia, Australia Most dams have major ecological impacts and their removal would greatly benefit riverine ecosystems. While in global terms we are still beavering away, in some parts of the world, dam removal now outpaces their construction and the diminishing cost efficiency of dams (and increasing recognition of their impacts) in drying regions may increase the rate of removals. However, while often hotspots for alien species and unfavourable to native species, artificial lentic habitats created by dams and other artificial lentic habitats can also act as refuges for aquatic fauna. Using the severely drying south-western Australia as a case region, we highlight that artificial refuges can be very important to native fishes, and contend their value may actually increase in the future due to the influence of climate change. Examples highlighted include fire-fighting waterpoints that offer critical dry-season refuge for threatened species, and large water supply dams that are free from alien piscivores (by eradication or luck). We argue that in regions where the major impact of climate change will be to reduce streamflow and where fishes can readily utilise lentic habitats for refuge or recruitment, there is potential to harness artificial waterbodies to achieve conservation outcomes while not jeopardising other values. 110 Sawfish in Papua New Guinea: what we know and where to next William White1, Sharon Appleyard1, Leontine Baje2, Benthly Sabub2 1. CSIRO, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. National Fisheries Authority, Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea During a large-scale project on the shark and ray fisheries of Papua New Guinea which commenced in 2014, records of sawfish catches were collated and anecdotal information from fishers collected. Tissue samples, photographs and morphometric measurements from dried rostra and/or fins were taken from any sawfish observed during artisanal surveys. Also, an observer program on prawn trawlers in the Gulf of Papua collected data and samples from any sawfish captures. All four species known to occur in the area (Anoxypristis cuspidata, Pristis clavata, P. pristis and P. zijsron) were recorded in the fishery catches. Anoxypristis cuspidata was by far the most abundant species caught. Most records were from the Gulf of Papua but records also taken from Manus, Rabaul and Bougainville. The difficulties in collecting such data in Papua New Guinea and the best way to continue acquiring good data and providing capacity building tools are discussed. 111 Come find me: Defining habitats and habitat use for Chondrichthyans Melissa C Marquez Over the last few decades, a key part of risk assessment is evaluating the distributional overlap of fish with the commercial fisheries, where fish distribution is influenced by habitat use. We synthesise published observations of habitat use for different life history stages of Chondrichthyans and hypothesise the associated catch composition in terms of sex, size, and maturity. We then searched for these catch compositions and locations using New Zealand research vessel catch data. Results show that some life history stages and habitats can be identified, whereas others cannot. More results will be presented at the conference. 112 Reproductive cycle of Urolophus cruciatus in south-eastern Australia. Fabian I Trinnie1, Terence I Walker, Paul L Jones, Laurie J Laurenson 1. Department of Fisheries, WA Government, Hillarys, WA, Australia Observations of synchronous rapid growth of embryos and ovarian follicles in pregnant females during the half-year December‒ May leading to parturition, ovulation, mating and fertilization suggests Urolophus cruciatus has the capacity for an annual reproductive cycle. Conversely, the higher proportion of the pregnant females in the population carrying eggs than carrying embryos in utero during December‒May and all pregnant females in the population only carrying eggs in utero during June‒ November indicate a longer reproductive cycle. Analysis based on the usual assumptions implies that the species most likely exhibits a biennial cycle with ~18-month period of diapause following ovulation prior to ~6-month period of rapid embryogenesis. However, it is feasible that the period of the cycle is triennial with ~30-month period of diapause or alternatively diapause varies among individuals and varies from year to year. Rather than exhibiting a fixed-term reproductive cycle where obligatory diapause leads to parturition timed every year to provide favourable conditions for neonates, as suggested for several other chondrichthyan species, U. cruciatus may exhibit facultative diapause where the period of diapause and hence the reproductive cycle varies depending on the prevailing environmental conditions or density-dependent factors as described for many terrestrial species. Urolophus cruciatus is highly matrotrophic (>4000% wet mass gain from ovum to full-term embryo), litter size (1‒4) increases with maternal length, sex ratio among embryos is 1:1, and male breeding condition varies seasonally with peak sperm production coinciding with female ovulation. 113 How do Port Jackson sharks find their home? Catarina Vila Pouca1, Culum Brown1 1. Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia Benthic shark species have long been understudied, especially concerning their movement ecology. While it was generally assumed they have small scale movements and limited ranges, recent studies have rendered this idea erroneous. In eastern Australia, Port Jackson sharks undertake seasonal migrations of hundreds of kilometres in a few weeks, and aggregate yearly in shallow rocky reefs off the NSW coast during the austral winter–spring season to breed. Interestingly, in the Jervis Bay Marine Park, NSW, both males and females have small home ranges and show over 90% site fidelity during the breeding season and from year to year. To better understand their fine scale movements and homing abilities, we displaced eight Port Jackson sharks 3-7 km from their home reef in Jervis Bay and used active acoustic telemetry to track their movements following release. Some sharks were displaced to different reefs in the bay, while others were released in deep sandy areas in the middle of the bay, and displacements were done in the morning or at dusk. Tagged sharks alternated between stationary and travelling states upon release, with most activity observed after sunset. Most sharks stopped moving once they reached a rocky area, but all returned to their capture location, even those released on reefs with habitat very similar to their home reef. This is the first study to experimentally test a benthic shark species’ ability to return home, and our preliminary results show Port Jackson sharks did not have a preferred compass bearing towards their home reef during the initial hours after displacement. This finding suggests they might not have a cognitive map of the whole bay and need to reach a familiar area to orient and navigate home. 114 Contextually-specific variations in white shark activity measured by 3D-acceleration logger Charlie Huveneers1, Yuuki Watanabe2, Nicholas L Payne2, Jayson Semmens3 1. School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Bedford Park, SA, Australia 2. National Institute of Polar Research, Tokyo, Japan 3. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia Wildlife tourism is one of the fastest growing sectors of the tourism industry. White sharks, Carcharodon carcharias, have become a key attraction to wildlife tourism, which often occurs at important shark aggregation areas. In South Australia, the intensity of cage-diving activities more than doubled around 2007 from about 120 days of operations per annum to 265 days. Recent studies assessing the effects of such expansion showed that cage-diving operations can affect the behaviour and residency of white sharks. It is, however, unknown whether such changes are detrimental to sharks. We deployed activity packages encompassing high frequency acceleration and swim speed loggers, depth and temperature recorder, and animalborne camera to describe the fine-scale behaviour of white sharks at the Neptune Islands and assess whether cage-diving tourism changes the energy expenditure of white sharks due to increased activity. Ten sharks were fitted with activity packages for deployment periods ranging from 30 minutes to ~40 hrs (mean 22 hrs). A range of behavioural modes were recorded and varied between and within individuals. Strong accelerations were observed throughout the day and night. Bait chasing and a natural predation were recorded by the loggers and camera allowing to allocate accelerations and swimming speed to behaviours and compare the energetic cost of activities between these behaviours. 115 Morphology of the electrosensory system of three sympatric dasyatids from Moreton Bay. Arnault Gauthier1, Darryl Whitehead1, Bronwen Cribb2, Shaun Walter1, Ian Tibbets2, Michael Bennett1 1. School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia 2. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia Electroreception is the sense that allows organisms to detect weak electrical fields in the environment to detect prey or predators, orientate themselves through the Earth’s geomagnetic field, and communicate with conspecifics. Several decades of research on the electroreceptive ampullae of Lorenzini of elasmobranchs have shown that their morphology and distribution vary among species, and this has been attributed to be a function of differences in environment and lifestyle. The estuary stingray, Dasyatis fluviorum, the blue-spotted maskray, Neotrygon kuhlii, and the brown whipray, Himantura toshi, are three dasyatids common in Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia. Despite foraging sympatrically for benthic prey over intertidal sand flats their diets differ; N. kuhlii feeds primarily on polychaetes, D. fluviorum on brachyurans and H. toshi on caridean shrimp. We used light, confocal, scanning electron and transmission electron microscopy to assess whether morphological differences in their electrosensory system might explain their seeming ability to differentiate among buried prey. The electrosensory systems of these species were generally of similar morphology; however, previously undocumented features such as the peculiar shape of the ampullary canals and of their supportive cells in the ampulla proper were identified. 116 Future ocean conditions and the development, physiology, and behaviour of shallow sharks Jodie Rummer1, Connor Gervias1, 2, Dennis D.U. Heinrich2, 3, Martijn S. Johnson2, Daniel W Kraver2, Tiffany J. Nay2, Gillian M.C. Renshaw4 1. James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia 3. Southern Shark Ecology Group, School of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science & Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia 4. Hypoxia and Ischemia Research Unit, School of Allied Health Science, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia Increasing atmospheric CO2 (43% since the Industrial Revolution) is warming the oceans (2.0-4.8°C by 2100), increasing the frequency and extent of hypoxia (low oxygen), and decreasing ocean pH (0.3-0.4 units by 2100; ocean acidification) at a rate 100-times faster than over the past million years. Tropical sharks may be some of the most negatively affected by climate change. Warmer, narrow temperature ranges and their life history – slow growing, late sexual maturity, and low reproductive output – could mean they are unable to adapt fast enough to keep pace with climate change. The epaulette shark (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) may be different. This species lives on shallow coral reef flats and in lagoons where they may frequently encounter short-term periods of challenging environmental conditions (e.g. hypoxia, elevated CO2, and temperature fluctuations) especially during low tides. Indeed, epaulette sharks are remarkably tolerant to short periods (hours) of hypoxia, and we have been recently investigating this species after prolonged exposure to elevated CO2 and temperatures – as would be relevant under climate change – in ovo, upon hatching, as neonates, and into adulthood. Overall, adults are both behaviourally and physiologically tolerant to elevated CO 2, and our results from embryos reared under end-of-century CO2 conditions suggest that tolerance may start very early in life, just post-fertilization. Yet, we are only just beginning to understand the consequences of elevated temperatures and the importance of acclimation and movement to this species. Epaulette sharks may already possess adaptations that allow them to survive and thrive under the challenging environmental conditions they are already experiencing in their shallow reef habitats – adaptations that may also confer tolerance to conditions projected for the oceans by the end of this century. Projects are underway to determine whether other elasmobranchs, especially pelagic species that may not experience such fluctuations in their environment, will be equally as tolerant. 117 Too hot to handle? The use of movement by a benthic elasmobranch species, Hemiscyllium ocellatum, to aleviate effects of elevated temperature. Connor Gervais2, 1, Tiffany Nay1, 3, Gillian Renshaw4, John Steffensen5, Jacob Johansen6, Jodie Rummer1, 3 1. ARC Center of Excellence, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia 3. College of Marine and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 4. Griffith University, Nathan, QLD, Australia 5. University of Copenhagen, Helsingor, Denmark 6. Department of Marine Science, University of Texas, Port Aransas, Texas, United States Epaulette sharks, Hemiscyllium ocellatum, occupy shallow reef flats that can experience relatively large variations in daily and seasonal temperatures. For example, some coral reef flats can experience temperatures that are 3-4°C warmer than surrounding habitats on a daily basis. However, epaulette sharks may have evolved behavioural and/or physiological strategies to mitigate the effects of elevated temperatures, which will be important to their survival with climate change projections. We used a shuttle-box system to examine whether juvenile sharks that are exposed to current day summer and winter temperatures as well as predicted end-of-century temperatures use movement to maintain their body temperatures. We also examined the influence of temperature on growth and food consumption. We found that juvenile epaulette sharks showed a seasonallydependent tendency to thermoregulate. During winter, when maximal habitat temperatures are far below lethal limits, individuals showed no thermoregulatory behaviour. However, during summer, when maximum temperatures may approach lethal limits, juveniles actively sought to limit thermal exposure to 30.7± 1.04°C during the day and 28.54± 0.75°C at night. Similarly, individuals acclimated to predicted end-of-century conditions (32°C), actively sought out 32.94± 0.46°C during the day and 30.74± 0.68°C at night. Regardless of acclimation temperature, juveniles maintained the same food consumption rates (5% of their body mass), but this resulted in decreased growth rates (mass and total length) in sharks living at 32°C. Although behavioural thermoregulation may be a trait with some capacity for acclimation, overall, this species experienced a clear reduction in growth and eventual mortality at temperatures just +3°C above summer averages. Within one generation, physiological and biochemical acclimation may be more costly than movement, and therefore the latter may be a valid strategy for this species to avoid extreme temperatures during summer months. As water temperatures continue to rise, it is important to consider that the distribution and abundance patterns for epaulette sharks and many other coral reef species may change. 118 Animal-borne video and accelerometers reveal high energy requirements of white shark breaching behaviour Jayson M Semmens1, Alison A Kock2, Yuuki Y Watanabe3, Charles M Shepard4, Eric Berkenpas4, Kilian M Stehfest1, Adam Barnett5, Nicholas L payne6 1. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 2. Shark Spotters, Fish Hoek, South Africa 3. National Institute of Polar Research, Tokyo, Japan 4. The National Geographic Society, Washington, DC, USA 5. Centre for Tropical Water and Aquatic Ecosystem Research, James Cook University, Cairns, Queensland, Australia 6. University of Roehampton , London, UK Large predators expend large amounts of energy foraging for prey based on expected high return. Documenting how they manage costs and benefits of feeding is difficult, particularly for marine predators. Here we combined animal-borne video, accelerometry, depth sensors, and biomechanical principles to examine behaviour and estimate energetic cost, during white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) breaching – a behaviour where sharks launch from the water while attacking Cape fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus). We show that breaching begins at depths up to 20 m, is characterised by a brief (~ 7-16 s) ascent to the surface during which pitch angle increases by ~30 °, and tail-beat frequency increases by a maximum of 6.5-fold (0.39 to 2.50 Hz). This increase in tail-beat frequency equates to an estimated 7-fold increase in energetic costs during a breach. Sharks also demonstrated the ability to rapidly adjust their approach to the seal during ascent. Tail-beat frequency during breaching was ~2-4 times higher (0.83-1.67 Hz) than during non-predatory ascents (0.4 Hz). Biomechanical considerations suggest that breaching attacks require 1.8-3.3 times more energy than non-predatory ascents. This highly energetic tactic leads to high rates of predation success, exemplifying the high cost/high return foraging strategy of top predators. 119 Caudal fin aspect ratio as a predictor of maximum swimming speed Darcie E Hunt1, John G Purser1, Giles A Thomas2, Jennifer M Cobcroft3, Nicholas J. F. Rawlinson1 1. Fisheries and Aquaculture Center, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Launceston, TAS, Australia 2. Mechanical Engineering, University College London, London, UK 3. Fisheries and Aquaculture Center, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Hobart, TAS, Australia The speed at which a fish can swim is determined by a combination of the movement of the muscle structure, the shape of the fish and the fins. There are three different types of swimming speeds identified in fish; sustained swimming, prolonged swimming, and burst swimming. It is generally recognised that maximum swimming speeds are the most difficult to accurately estimate. The aim of this study was to predict the maximum swimming speed using morphometrics from historical data. The maximum speeds of various teleost species were collected from a range of sources dating back to 1952. Each species was classified into a swimming mode based on Lindsay (1978) and only caudal fin swimmers were used. The documented maximum speeds were plotted against caudal fin aspect ratio and an exponential trendline was fitted. A total of 255 individual swimming speed measurements of fish species were gathered from 31 different literature sources. Anguilliform had the lowest aspect ratio with values ranging from 0 to 1.61 and thunniform had the greatest with values ranging from 5.5 to 7.9. The relationship between caudal fin aspect ratio (AR) and maximum swimming speed of 74 species from the literature was best described by an exponential equation. (y = 0.59e0.42x, R2= 0.85). This allows us to make general predictions as to the maximum swimming speed of a fish given the aspect ratio of the caudal fin. This study’s finding can be applied beyond these species, for example, the maximum swimming speeds of fish could be utilised for the design of bycatch reduction devices or refinement of existing gears/modifications. 120 Bioelectrical impedance analysis, not your granddaddy’s condition factor Joe Margraf1 1. University of Alaska Fairbanks, Alaska, United States Bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) is commonly used in human health and nutrition fields but has only recently been considered as a potential tool for assessing fish condition. Once BIA is calibrated, it estimates fat/moisture levels and energy content without the need to kill fish. Despite the promise held by BIA, published studies have been divided on whether BIA can provide accurate estimates of body composition in fish. In cases where BIA was not successful, the models lacked the range of fat levels or sample sizes we determined were needed for model success (range of dry fat levels of 29%, n = 60, yielding an R2 of 0.8). Reduced range of fat levels requires an increased sample size to achieve that benchmark; therefore, standardization of methods is needed. Here we discuss standardized methods based on a decade of research, identify sources of error, discuss where BIA is headed, and suggest areas for future research. 121 The intersection between fish physiology and behavior in regulating microhabitat use Tiffany Nay1, Jacob Johansen2, Connor Gervais1, Adam Habary1, 3, John Steffensen3, Jodie Rummer1 1. ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. Marine Science, University of Texas, Port Aransas, Texas, USA 3. Marine Biological Section, University of Copenhagen, Helsingør, Denmark As global temperatures increase, fish populations at low latitudes are thought to be at risk as they are adapted to narrow temperature ranges and live at temperatures close to their thermal tolerance limits. Numerous studies have documented poleward shifts in the geographic ranges of many tropical fishes in response to increasing temperatures, but few have considered movements among microhabitats. Movements among microhabitats with different temperatures (or temperature profiles) may provide a strategy to cope with changing conditions, and allow fish to behaviourally regulate their thermal environment. Here, we investigated the thermal preferences of a temperature-sensitive coral reef cardinalfish (Cheilodipterus quinquelineatus) and a temperature-tolerant intertidal mudskipper (Periophthalmus argentilineatus). Fishes were exposed to 28°C (average at collection site) or 32°C (predicted end-of century) for 5 weeks prior to experiments. The thermal preference (Tpref) was determined using a shuttlebox system, which allowed fish to behaviourally select their thermal environment. Regardless of treatment temperature, cardinalfish preferred 29.5 ± 0.25°C, approximating the average summer temperatures they experience in the wild. However, 32°C fish moved more frequently to correct their thermal environment than 28°C fish, and daytime movements were more frequent than night-time movements. Mudskippers preferred 26.7 ± 2.1°C regardless of treatment temperature, with fishes exposed to 28°C exhibiting more frequent movements than fishes exposed to 32°C during night-time hours. Understanding temperature-mediated movements is imperative for predicting how ocean warming will influence coral reef species and distribution patterns. 122 Global analyses of tuna diet and isotopes: moving from regional to macro-scale understanding of oceanic food webs Heidi Pethybridge1, CLIOTOP Task Team 2016-01 1. CSIRO Oceans And Atmosphere Flagship, Hobart, TAS, Australia Examining broad-scale patterns in marine food-webs and ecosystems is essential for understanding macro-scale patterns and processes and could support a greater adoption of general ecosystem-based management practices. This talk will present recent work undertaken by a team of scientist connected through the international GLOBEC program CLIOTOP - Climate Impacts on Oceanic Top Predators. Focusing on three species of oceanic tuna (yellowfin, bigeye, albacore), two global databases were compiled: (i) >20,000 stomach samples including more than 300 prey taxa from tunas collected 1969-2014; and (ii) >6,000 bulk nitrogen and carbon stable isotope records, 2000-2015. These datasets were used to undertake the first inter-oceanic comparisons of top predator diets and isotopes ever conducted at a global scale. Broad, macro-scale trophic patterns in pelagic ecosystems were quantitatively assessed using a modified classification tree approach for stomach contents data and generalised additive mixed models for isotope data. Interpolated results were relayed on oceanographic contour maps that characterise the global distribution patterns of tuna prey, diet diversity and trophic positions. Global and ocean basin differences within and between each of the three tuna species studied were detected. Results from these analyses provide valuable depictions of the trophic pathways that underlie the production of tunas and other pelagic predators in the open ocean. Modelling efforts also allowed hypotheses to be posed about future food web interactions in a warming ocean. 123 Modeling of oceanic mid and high trophic levels with SEAPODYM Patrick Lehodey2, 1, Inna Senina1, Beatriz Calmettes1, Olivier Titaud1, Anna Conchon1 1. Space Oceanography Division, CLS, Collecte Localisation Satellites 2. CLS, Canal Technology Park, RAMONVILLE SAINT-AGNE, France In the pelagic foodweb, micronekton at the mid-trophic level (MTL) are one of the lesser known components of the ocean ecosystem despite being a major driver of the spatial dynamics of their predators, of which many are exploited species (e.g. tunas). The Spatial Ecosystem and Population Dynamics Model (SEAPODYM) is a modelling framework that includes a representation of the spatial dynamics of several epi- and mesopelagic MTL functional groups. The dynamics of these groups are driven by physical (temperature and currents) and biogeochemical (primary production, euphotic depth) variables. A key issue to address is its parameterization for which we present a method using in situ acoustic data to estimate the parameters with a maximum likelihood estimation approach. The modeling of these components is central in the development of spatial population dynamics of larger predators, either protected species or exploited fish populations. A series of applications illustrate the recent advances in the continuous development of SEAPODYM, including the modeling of past history of tuna populations under the combined effect of climate variability and fishing exploitation, the projection of climate change and the progress in operational real time systems of monitoring. 124 Fish Phylogenetics: Swimming into the 21st Century Peter F Cowman, Thomas Near Ray-finned fishes represent over half of the total vertebrate diversity of the planet. Yet, at the beginning of this decade, the most successful branch in the vertebrate tree of life was ranked the lowest in terms of taxonomic sampling and phylogenetic resolution. In recent years, a focused phylogenetic effort across the ichthyological community has resulted in three large fish ‘Trees of Life’. Although incomplete at various scales, these trees have provided an unprecedented opportunity to explore numerous dynamics underpinning the diversification of fishes across the globe. On the eve of the genomic revolution for fish phylogenetics, the systematic implications of these trees, comparisons with their predecessors and their topographic concordance with fossil and morphological evidence is needed to gauge current and future progress. We examine the acceleration these new phylogenies represent to the phylogenetic resolution of the ray-finned fishes, their ability to provide a taxonomic consensus to fish classification, and whether there is significant agreement or disagreement with morphological classification. 125 Population genomics & taxonomy in Australasian fishes: the five Ws and one H (what, why, when, where, who and how) Sharon Appleyard1, John Pogonoski1, Daniel Gledhill1, Alastair Graham1 1. CSIRO National Research Collections Australia, Hobart, TAS, Australia The Australian National Fish Collection (ANFC) holds over 150 000 specimens representing approximately 3 400 species mostly collected from the Indo-Pacific. Its strengths are sharks, rays and deep-water fishes. Alongside taxonomy, genetic/genomic research in the ANFC focusses on species identifications, phylogenetics, biogeography, population connectivity and inputs into sustainable fish management and conservation. These research activities have been improved due to our involvement as an integral partner in several domestic and international barcoding and next generation sequencing consortia. As part of these consortia, genetics/genomics in the ANFC is divided into two equally important components – a. taxonomic validation and uptake of mtDNA barcoding for reference databases to enable rapid species identifications, informed phylogenetic analyses and increased species discovery; b. detection of new nuclear genomic regions of interest for species of commercial and biodiversity importance using next generation sequencing. This presentation is a reflective synopsis of our experiences with genomic investigations in fish. Extensive data sets and numerous case studies ranging from the application of alternate sequencing approaches and the manipulations of large data sets in "the cloud" to the judicious choice of molecular tools to address the question in hand will be presented. These data sets act as references for discovery and understanding of Australian fishes, including improved resolution of taxonomic structure, distributional ranges and habitat preferences. 126 Australia’s diverse eel fauna: a preliminary overview of their taxonomy and biogeography John J Pogonoski1 1. CSIRO, Hobart, TAS, Australia The order Anguilliformes (true eels) consists of around 1000 species worldwide in 16 different families, numbers that are comparable to other highly diverse groups such as sharks and rays. In Australia, over 200 eel species in 13 families are represented from freshwater, estuarine and shelf waters to the edge of the continental slope and abyssal plain beyond 3000 m depth. As adults, species occupy a variety of habitats from within benthic sediments and caves to benthopelagic and mesopelagic zones in tropical to polar waters. Although freshwater eels (Anguillidae) have received considerable attention worldwide due to their commercial importance, most marine eels are poorly studied despite their ecological importance and sometimes high abundances, as evident from trawl catches and underwater video. The poorly-sampled cryptic habitats often occupied by eels have confounded the understanding of their taxonomy and biology as many species are only known from a handful of specimens. On occasions, species were described based on their leptocephalus larval stage, their corresponding adult forms yet to be determined. Opportunistic data collection during regional faunal surveys, examination of museum fish collections over a 15 year period and molecular techniques (DNA barcoding) have all helped revise alpha-taxonomy to reveal numerous cryptic and previously unrecognised species. Structure of the Australian marine eel fauna is discussed within different taxonomic groupings, habitats and bioregions. Comparisons to other regional faunas in the Indo-Pacific show varying levels of endemicity, and is highest in the Congridae and Ophichthidae. Families covered in most detail include the Congridae (conger eels), Muraenidae (moray eels) and Synaphobranchidae (basketwork eels). 127 Long-term observing systems: what is on offer in Australia and can it improve my science? Ana Lara-Lopez1, Tim Moltmann1 1. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia Accurate information about how our environment is changing needs reliable long-term observations in order to assess these changes. Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) was established under an Australian Government research infrastructure program, to deliver ocean observations to the marine and climate scientists to undertake research of national and international significance. IMOS is integrated across spatial and temporal scales, supporting open- ocean and climate science as well as science at continental shelf scale and marine coastal science. It has observing assets in Australia’s tropical north, temperate regions, and the Southern Ocean down to the Antarctic shelf. It is also integrated across disciplines ranging from physics and chemistry to marine biology and ecosystems. Making all of the data openly available ensures that this collective observational power is used by many stakeholders to generate a wide range of scientific outputs, from PhDs’ and peer-reviewed publications to operational ocean forecasts and satellite products. Some of the IMOS observing platforms include: Ships of opportunity: underway physical and biogeochemical data, including fCO2, continuous plankton recorder (CPR) and bioacoustics. Autonomous Underwater Vehicle: georeferenced benthic stereo imagery Animal tagging: acoustic tags on a wide range of fish, sharks and mammals collecting behavioural data. National Mooring Network: physical and biogeochemical data including PAR, nutrients, fluorescence, plankton, pCO2 and passive acoustics. Ocean Gliders: Chla, CDOM, backscatter, O2, irradiance and physical variables. ARGO: floats deployed collecting physical variables with some collecting O2 data The Australian Ocean Data Network is also IMOS key Facility with a long-term goal of building an open-access, standards-based, scalable, national information infrastructure providing not only IMOS data but also data from other agencies. The sustained physical, chemical and biological observations collected by IMOS provide a wealth of data for potential applications to fish and fisheries research. 128 IMOS OceanCurrent web site Madeleine Cahill1, Rich Little1 1. CSIRO, Battery Point, TAS, Australia Bringing ocean observations to users is almost as important as actually making those observations. That's why Australia's Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) includes a comprehensive data management system as well as multiple avenues for delivering the data to a variety of users, including those with a need for the latest-available ocean observations from satellites, HF radars and gliders. One of these avenues is the OceanCurrent website, where a wide range of graphical representations (including animations) of the many types of IMOS data are just a few mouse clicks away. The site also has a News section, which 1) informs readers about ocean events such as extreme currents or water temperatures, and 2) shows people how to interpret the available graphics, to empower them to notice such features themselves. The site serves as a preview facility, showing the space-time coverage of the various data sets, both individually and in relation to each other. By overlaying point measurements made by current meters, gliders etc., on maps of sea surface temperature, ocean colour and geostrophic velocity from altimetry satellite imagery, users can quickly see the broader context of the in-situ data, helping them to correctly interpret the point data. The imagery is updated several times a day, attracting users from outside the research community while also allowing members of the research community to locate and study particular ocean phenomena. 129 Physics to fisheries: IMOS data enables. John F Middleton1, John Luick1, Charles James1, Mark Doubell1, Paul van Ruth1, Ana Redondo1, Paul Malthouse1, Nicole Patten1 1. SARDI Aquatic Sciences, Henley Beach, SA, Australia Since 2006, SARDI has developed a significant field capability through the implementation of the Southern Australian Integrated Marine Observing System (SAIMOS). Coupled hydrodynamic, wave, biogeochemical and larval transport models have also been developed to address research, industry and government needs for the sustainable development of fisheries and aquaculture, and the health of the marine ecosystems of Southern Australia. Central to these efforts is the on-going development of the (< 3 km grid) Southern Australian Regional Ocean Model (SAROM) for the shelves and Gulfs. SAROM has been validated against the IMOS data streams of currents, temperature and salinity, and provides information along the seaward boundaries of finer scale models for Spencer Gulf and Coffin Bay. Indeed, a PIRSA/FRDC funded project delivered a high resolution (< 1 km) coupled and validated hydrodynamic/wave/biogeochemical model of Spencer Gulf: information along the Gulf mouth was obtained from the SAROM and SAIMOS biogeochemical data. The model was used to evaluate the ecological carrying capacity of the Gulf based on natural and anthropogenic nutrient sources (finfish aquaculture and waste water). The studies were presented to government as a GUI tool (“CarCap”) to assist in the regulation of finfish aquaculture in the gulf (where, how much?). The models developed were also used to simulate prawn larval dispersal in upper Spencer Gulf to demonstrate the optimal areas for prawn fishing efforts so as to maintain sustainability. In collaboration with the BoM, the predictive OceanMAPS global model is being coupled with the suite of models (validated against SAIMOS) to provide a now-cast/forecast model to assist in addressing fishing industry needs: where do the harmful algal blooms go, how do we respond to them, what are the optimal fishing vessel routes to minimise fuel consumption? Other applications including sardine habitat prediction will be outlined (based on water temperature, salinity, chlorophyll-a, depth), as well as planned applications to seagrass habitat and oyster aquaculture. 130 Refining a Nordmøre-grid for the Spencer Gulf prawn-trawl fishery Craig Noell1, Matt Broadhurst2, Steve Kennelly3, Owen Burnell1, Graham Hooper1 1. SARDI Aquatic Sciences, Henley Beach, SA, Australia 2. Fisheries Conservation Technology Unit, NSW Department of Primary Industries, Coffs Harbour, NSW, Australia 3. IC Independent Consulting, Cronulla, NSW, Australia Incremental technical refinements were made to a generic Nordmøre-grid to minimise bycatches of the giant cuttlefish (Sepia apama), blue swimmer crabs (Portunus armatus) and various teleosts, while maintaining catches of western king prawns (Melicertus latisulcatus) in an Australian prawn-trawl fishery with Marine Stewardship Council accreditation. The Nordmøre-grid changes involved varying bar spaces, escape-exit areas and guiding-panel lengths. Compared to a control, catches of unwanted teleosts and the targeted prawns largely remained unaffected by any of the technical changes—although the quality of the latter was improved. Maximum reductions in unwanted catches of giant cuttlefish and blue swimmer crabs (both ~90%) were achieved by a Nordmøre-grid with 38-mm bar spaces, a large escape exit (>0.8 m2) and a 2.7-m guiding panel. While the fate of escaping cuttlefish and crabs remains unknown, it is likely their survival would exceed that for discards. Through this study we have identified a potential management tool for reducing unwanted bycatches that could be considered in the context of other existing strategies for this fishery involving spatial/temporal closures and on-board handling. 131 Inter-annual and regional variation of fish in prawn trawl by-catch: The importance of temporal replication for identifying potential trawl related impacts Owen Burnell1 1. SARDI Aquatic Sciences, Henley Beach, SA, Australia Prawn trawling is known to have deleterious localised effects on benthic ecosystems, particularly slow growing and sessile organisms, although long-term impacts are varied and less certain for relatively motile bycatch, such as fish. This study examined changes in the community structure and biomass of fish bycatch in trawl surveys from Spencer Gulf, which has supported a prawn fishery since 1967. With the view of augmenting ecosystem-based management in the future, two fishery-independent by-catch surveys were undertaken throughout the gulf six years apart, enabling a long-term temporal comparison of trawl bycatch. Differences in the community structure and biomass of fish were found to be driven primarily by regional (i.e. latitude) and/or inter-survey differences, while trawl intensity (i.e. hours trawled per km2) had no consistent influence across the two surveys. The absence of a consistent trawl-related distribution in fish biomass between the two surveys suggests our ability to detect any localised effects of trawling is potentially limited to discrete time periods. Temporal declines in fish biomass were evident across multiple species and size classes; however, they were most prominent in the southern half of the gulf, where trawl effort is historically low. While variable recruitment and/or migration within southern Spencer Gulf might explain these temporal decreases in the biomass, it is important to maintain similar ecosystem-focused studies to increase our understanding of potential trawl-related impacts. Enhancing this understanding will require (1) in-depth biological and ecological information about potential indicator species from the bycatch and (2) where possible, greater temporal resolution (i.e. intra-annual) and replication (i.e. inter-annual) to develop accurate biological reference points. 132 Methods for determining in situ target strength Ben Scoulding1, Paul G Fernandes2, Sven Gastauer3, Sascha Fassler4, David N MacLennan2, Eric Armstrong5, Stephane Gauthier6 1. Echoview, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University, Aberdeen, Scotland 3. Centre for Marine Science and Technology, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia 4. IMARES, IJmuiden, Netherlands 5. Marine Scotland Science, Aberdeen, Scotland 6. Fisheries and Oceans , Sidney, Canada Acoustic surveys are effective methods to quantify the distribution and abundance of many aquatic fauna, and are particularly useful for the assessment of pelagic fishes. To convert data gathered from an acoustic survey of living resources into estimates of abundance, it is essential to know the target strength (TS, in dB) for the species and size of interest. TS is a logarithmic description of the quantity of acoustic backscattered energy from an individual and can be measured in situ using split-beam echosounders. Whereas in ideal conditions these may be the most representative estimates available, there is no comprehensive approach on how to account for the potential problem of multiple target detections and other potential sources of error. This paper describes the current state of the art and best methods to obtain standardized in situ TS measurements. We present recommendations on: equipment settings; selection of appropriate data; single-target detection criteria; removal of dense-echo regions to reduce the acceptance of multiple targets; post-processing; and validation methods. Most methods tested here were implemented using Echoview post-processing software. This is the first systematic and comprehensive description of ways to deal with the multitude of issues associated with multiple target errors. The methods described here are therefore recommended to improve single-target detection in order to deliver the most representative measures of TS for use in acoustic surveys. 133 Variability in Atlantic mackerel target strength and its effects on acoustic abundance estimates Ben Scoulding1, Paul G Fernandes2, Sven Gastauer3, Sascha M.M Fassler4, Phillip Copland5, David N MacLennan2 1. Echoview, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University, Aberdeen, Scotland 3. Centre for Marine Science and Technology, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia 4. IMARES, IJmuiden, Netherlands 5. Marine Scotland Science, Aberdeen, Scotland Atlantic mackerel Scomber scombrus is a small pelagic, migratory fish which supports valuable commercial fisheries. Fisheryindependent mackerel abundance estimates in the Northeast Atlantic are currently based on egg-production surveys every third year, and do not yet consider acoustic data. Echo-integration surveys could provide annual estimates of abundance, with additional scope for studying mackerel distributions throughout the year. However, this requires good knowledge of the mackerel target strength (TS), which is not yet adequate. The present study provides in situTS values for mackerel from measurements made at sea with split-beam echosounders operating concurrently at 18, 38, 120 and 200 kHz. Acoustic data was analysed using Echoview post-processing software. Empirical results suggest mean TS of -51.22 dB at 18 kHz, -59.83 dB at 38 kHz, -55.51 dB at 120 kHz and -53.43 dB at 200 kHz, for a mean fish length of 33.3 cm. This differs significantly from the values currently assumed in acoustic surveying, which advocates a TS of -53.07 dB for a 33cm fish at 38 kHz. The sensitivity of mackerel abundance estimates to variations in TS estimates was also investigated using data from a dedicated mackerel acoustic survey around the Shetland Islands, Scotland. Confidence limits for the biomass estimates (400,000 to 4,500,000 tonnes) at each frequency were obtained using geostatistical techniques. Total stock biomass estimates at 38 and 200 kHz were in very good agreement with each other (to within 2.2 %) and were in range of values from an independent (i.e. non-acoustic) mackerel stock assessment (5,137,104 tonnes). 134 Transitioning to a brave new world: the need for, and challenge of, interdisciplinary research. Stewart Frusher1, Marcus Haward1, Alistair Hobday2 1. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. CSIRO, Hobart, Tasmania The world rapidly needs to respond to global challenges such as food security, population growth and climate change amongst an ever increasing rate of globalisation that is also reshaping trade and markets. The world’s oceans cover 71% of the earth’s surface and, like many of the terrestrial deserts, are underutilised for food production. However, unlike deserts, virtually all regions of the oceans support commercial fisheries from krill and toothfish in Polar Regions to tunas in tropical regions. Modern commercial fisheries are still based around a “hunter-gather” genre whereas agriculture replaced the “hunter-gather” sector thousands of years ago. The equivalent change is commencing in marine production systems where aquaculture has been the fastest growing production system globally over the last three decades. However, marine aquaculture is largely contained within the coastal zone – a region coming under increased stress through population growth, recreational use and concerns for the conservation of biodiversity. This coastal zone represents only 8% of the earth’s surface. A brave new world will see the development of offshore marine production systems and these are likely to be multi-sector (e.g. food production, conservation, energy production, tourism). In Australia, a country with the third largest marine jurisdiction globally, this journey is still in its conceptual phase although interest is increasing. At the global scale there is increasing interest in the oceans and given the rapid pace of technological change, development needs to be controlled so that sufficient research can underpin the development of policy if we do not want to repeat some of the disasters associated with the green revolution. Such research will require strong inter- and trans-disciplinary teams and greater global cooperation. 135 Feedbacks as a bridging concept for advancing transdisciplinary sustainability research Jessica Blythe1, Kirsty L Nash2, Julian Yates3, Graeme Cumming1 1. ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. Centre for Marine Socioecology, Hobart, TAS, Australia 3. Institute for Resource, Environment and Sustainability (IRES), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada Recognition of the need for marine research that spans the social-ecological divide has opened an exciting space for transdisciplinary research. Yet, attempts at working across disciplines often leads to epistemological debates and methodological rifts between natural and social sciences, presenting significant challenges for transdisciplinary teams. Using fisheries research within the context of a coral reef social-ecological system as a case study, we explore how these points of tension may be addressed using a three stage process: 1) promoting epistemological transparency, where differing perspectives are made explicit; 2) employing feedbacks as a bridging concept to effectively engage with complex system dynamics from multiple perspectives; and 3) encouraging plurality, rather than the unification of perspectives, to foster innovative research along sustainable and desirable pathways. 136 Developing knowledge and tools to inform integrated marine management: Spencer Gulf as an Australian case study Bronwyn Gillanders1, Zoe Doubleday1, Alice Jones1, Phill Cassey1, Thomas Prowse1, Sally Scrivens1, Tim Ward2 1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia 2. South Australian Research and Development Institute of Aquatic Sciences, Adelaide, SA Coastal and marine waters are becoming increasingly crowded. Besides fishing and aquaculture ventures there is also significant shipping and port development associated with new mineral and processing ventures, and potential for biosecurity risks. Other human activities operating in and around the sea also have potential to cause stress to marine and coastal habitats and the species they support. Understanding cumulative impacts of multiple activities remains a critical gap in marine management. Our aims were to generate a spatially explicit assessment of cumulative risk; examine current shipping traffic and determine how shipping pathways and number of ships are likely to change given proposed mining expansion and investigate potential changes to cumulative risk, as well as interactions with key fisheries and aquaculture activities, associated with changes in shipping. We mapped the spatial footprint and intensity of human activities occurring throughout Spencer Gulf, a large inverse estuary. We combined information from an ecological risk assessment using an expert elicitation process with the spatial intensity of threats to generate a spatially explicit assessment of cumulative risk. This map shows that the most-at-risk habitats occur in northern Spencer Gulf, near major industrial activities. Current shipping activities show that ships use clear pathways associated with bathymetry and future scenarios for shipping and port development suggest an increase in shipping traffic of 91-249% over current levels. Visualisation of shipping scenarios with the existing prawn and sardine fisheries suggest potential overlap of activities. Management solutions are required to avoid congestion in the narrow shipping paths of northern Spencer Gulf and to minimise the potential impacts and risks of increased disturbance on the Gulf environment and other industries supported by the Gulf. 137 In the water with white sharks Kirin Apps1, Charlie Huveneers2, Kay Dimmock1, David Lloyd1 1. Southern Cross University, East Lismore, NSW, Australia 2. Flinders University, Adelaide, SA, Australia Interactions with marine megafauna, including shark-based tourism, has experienced exponential growth since the 1990’s bringing with it intense management and academic scrutiny. To date, much of the research into wildlife tourism has focused on potential negative biophysical impacts to species and habitat. However, the proponents of wildlife tourism suggest that conservation benefits, resulting from education and interpretation, may mitigate potential impacts. Despite these discussions, the social dimensions of marine-based tourism remain largely unexplored. Based on this gap, the current research applied a mixed methods (qualitative and quantitative) approach to investigate the human dimensions of shark-based tourism using a case study of white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) cage-diving at the Neptune Islands, South Australia. This study investigated a number of features of the tourism activity including, participant’s beliefs and attitudes towards sharks, and on-tour education. Surveys gathered responses from a sample (n=86) of participants with responses revealing the decision to cage-dive with white sharks is driven by factors including education and the perceived naturalness of the experience. A second survey (n=655) was conducted to investigate participant satisfaction with on-board education content and to determine what (if any) specific information they hope to receive. While the majority of participants agreed the cage-dive tour was an educational experience, the results support the demand for additional information about the biology, habits and threats to white sharks. The potential for shark cage-dive tourism to facilitate and support shark conservation issues via education and interpretation initiatives are further discussed. 138 A review of the Ocean Sunfishes (Family Molidae) in Australia and New Zealand, using genetics and fisheries by-catch data Marianne Nyegaard1, Neil Loneragan1 1. Murdoch University, Murdoch, Western Australia, Australia Despite an astounding paucity of information on population levels anywhere, Ocean Sunfish (Mola mola) was recently listed as vulnerable by the IUCN. The concerns are high levels of by-catch in various fisheries across the globe, and a very limited understanding of population dynamics. Details of sunfish interactions in the Australian and New Zealand longline fisheries have been recorded by fisheries observers for over 15 years, and could hold valuable information on recent population trends in these areas. But which species are caught? Over 200 years of taxonomic confusion has rendered Molidae species identification no easy feat. To determine which sunfish species are caught in the longline fisheries across Australia and New Zealand, Australian Fisheries Management Authority and the New Zealand Ministry for Primary Industries provided us with tissue samples through their longline observer programs. We also used social media to locate stranded sunfish and secure tissue samples. The surprising genetic results have provided an excellent opportunity to review the zoogeography of Australian and New Zealand sunfish, and comment on the uncertainty associated with assessing their population trends and vulnerability to fishing pressure, based on by-catch data. 139 Who’s your mama? Riverine hybridization of threatened freshwater trout cod and Murray cod. Alan Couch1, Peter J Unmack1, Fiona Dyer1, Mark Lintermans1 1. Institute for Applied Ecology, University Of Canberra, ACT, Australia Rates of hybridization and introgression are increasing dramatically worldwide because of translocations, restocking of organisms and habitat modifications thus determining whether hybridization is beneficial or detrimental for the species involved is commensurately important for conservation. Restocking programs are sometimes criticized because of the genetic consequences of hatchery-bred fish breeding with wild populations. These concerns are important to conservation restocking programs, including Percichthyidae. Two of the better known Australian Percichthyidae are the Murray Cod (Maccullochella peelii) and Trout Cod (Maccullochella macquariensis) which were formerly widespread over the Murray Darling Basin. In much of the Murrumbidgee River Trout Cod and Murray Cod were sympatric until the late 1970s when Trout Cod were extirpated. Here we use genetic SNP data to examine hybridization and introgression between Murray Cod and Trout Cod in the upper Murrumbidgee River and consider implications for restocking programs. For the first time we have confirmed restocked riverine Trout Cod as reproducing in the wild. We detected hybrid Trout CodMurray Cod in the Upper Murrumbidgee, recording the first hybrid larvae in the wild. Although hybrid larvae, juveniles and adults have been recorded in hatcheries and impoundments, and hybrid adults have been recorded in rivers previously, this is the first time fertile F1 have been recorded in the wild. The F1 backcrosses with Murray cod have also been found to be fertile. All backcrosses were with pure Murray Cod. Such introgression hasn't been recorded previously in these species, and the imbalance in hybridization direction may have important implications for restocking programs. 140 Lates calcarifer immune transcriptome reveals the Mincle C-Type Lectin Receptor as a partial replacement for TLR4 in LPS recognition in fish Emmanuelle Zoccola1, Stuart Kellie2, Andrew C Barnes1 1. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia 2. School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia Fish represent the most diverse and abundant vertebrate infraclass and one of the earliest divergent phyla with adaptive immunity. The adaptive immune system of fish has been successfully exploited through mass vaccination programs in the aquaculture industry. However, vaccination is problematic against highly diverse antigens, such as capsular polysaccharides and lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Fish have a subdued innate response to LPS, but adaptive response is generally high and type-specific. To better understand the link between initial innate response and early onset of adaptive immunity to carbohydrate antigens in the perciform barramundi (Lates calcarifer), an immune transcriptome was prepared from pronephros and spleen following vaccination with LPS and peptidoglycan. From 163,661 transcripts derived by Illumina mRNA-Seq, most grouped in neuronal, endocrine or immune system categories, suggesting a close relationship between the three systems. Most of the known TLRs were transcribed in the barramundi spleen and HK transcriptome, with the notable exception of TLR4, which is primarily responsible for LPS recognition in mammals. Several C-type lectin receptors were also identified, including CLEC4E (Mincle). As Mincle has been shown to bind LPS and is abundant on dendritic cells, its role in response to LPS in barramundi was further investigated. A high dose of LPS induced TNF-alpha expression via Mincle. However, IL-6 regulation, whilst still regulated in response to LPS, did not depend upon the Mincle pathway, suggesting other routes of activation. This study thus suggests that Mincle may act as a partial substitute for TLR4 in barramundi in the processing of LPS. 141 Asexual reproduction in elasmobranchs: who needs claspers anyway? Christine L Dudgeon1, Laura Coulton2, Emily Bone2, Severine Thomas2 1. The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia 2. Reef HQ Aquarium, Townsville, QLD, Australia Facultative parthenogenesis, asexual reproduction in otherwise sexually reproducing species, has been described from most vertebrate classes, excepting mammals, including seven species of elasmobranchs. Here we present a case study on leopard sharks, Stegostoma fasciatum, from the Reef HQ aquarium and discuss these findings with respect to the evolutionary implications for reproductive flexibility in elasmobranchs. 142 Variability in multiple paternity rates for grey reef sharks (Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos) and scalloped hammerhead sharks (Sphyrna lewini) in Papua New Guinea Madeline E Green1, 2, Sharon A Appleyard2, William White2, Sean R Tracey1, Jennifer Ovenden3 1. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. Australian National Fish Collection, CSIRO National Research Collections Australia, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 3. School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia The present study assessed the presence and prevalence of multiple paternity (MP) in litters of grey reef (Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos) and scalloped hammerhead (Sphyrna lewini) sharks caught in Papua New Guinea. Litter size between species significantly differed with an average of 3.3 pups for grey reef sharks and 17.2 pups for scalloped hammerhead. Using 15 microsatellite loci, we identified multiple paternity in 66% of grey reek sharks (4 out of 6 litters) and 100% multiple paternity in scalloped hammerhead sharks (5 litters) using 10 microsatellite loci. We reported high paternal skew and a positive correlation between adult size and litter size in scalloped hammerheads, but not in grey reef sharks. Differences in the frequency of MP between species and the identification of paternal skew is thought to be affiliated with mating strategies and post-copulatory mechanisms. The presence of MP is thought to benefit populations by enhancing the variation of genetic diversity therefore increasing the population’s genetic resilience to pressures including heavy fishing. Given both species are commonly impacted in local PNG fisheries, results from this study provide useful information for local management in the region. 143 Population structure and phylogeography of the Galápagos shark (Carcharhinus galapagensis) across the Pacific. Diana A Pazmino1, Colin A Simpfendorfer1, Gregory E Maes2, Lynne van Herwerden1 1. James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. Laboratory of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Genomics, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium Galápagos shark (Carcharhinus galapagensis) is a circum-tropical distributed species that commonly occur at isolated oceanic islands (Compagno 1984). The species is currently listed by the IUCN as "near threatened" (2003 assessment; Bennett et al. 2013). A previous population genetic study of the species in the west Pacific tentatively identified two Management Units (MUs): 1) Kermadec Islands and Elizabeth-Middleton Reef, and 2) Lord Howe Island; while Norfolk Island was suggested as a stepping-stone between both MUs. Our project attempted to assess connectivity and gene flow of C. galapagensis at a bigger scale across the Pacific region using genomic approaches. We examined the population genomic structure of Galápagos sharks using genome wide Single Nucleotide Polymorphism markers from DArTSeq. After rigorous steps of data filtering and quality control, a total of 8,218 SNPs were used for the analyses. To identify potential historical gene flow and/or sex-biased dispersal, we also sequenced the mitochondrial control region (997bp). After discarding outlier markers under potential selection, cluster analyses of neutral SNPs including STRUCTURE and NETVIEW revealed two highly distinct genetic groups, one comprising individuals from the East (Galápagos Islands, Ecuador and Revillagigedo, Mexico), the other from the Western Pacific (Hawaii, Australia and New Zealand). Phylogenetic analyses under Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood criteria using SNPs were congruent with such pattern indicating the presence of the same two major clades with high support. The sister species Carcharhinus obscurus was used as out-group. Advanced population genomics analyses will lead to detect footprints of selection and local adaptation, as well as understanding evolutionary connectivity, patterns and levels of gene flow and demographic history. Keywords: DArTSeq, SNPs, Phylogenetics, connectivity. 144 Using fishing vessels for basin-scale ecological monitoring using bio-acoustics and the continuous plankton recorder Rudy J Kloser1, Anthony J Richardson2 1. CSIRO, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. Oceans and Atmosphere, CSIRO, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia As part of Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS), basin-scale ecosystem monitoring is using fishing vessels as ships of opportunity. Bio-acoustic data are collected from the vessel’s calibrated acoustic systems and a Continuous Plankton Recorder (CPR) is towed on basin-scale transits. These data can provide metrics for the behaviour, distribution and abundance of phytoplankton, zooplankton and micronekton to describe annual and multi-annual trends. The context for these data is strengthened when combined with other associated remotely-sensed or directly-sampled physical, chemical and biological information. We review a decade of data collected from the Tasman Sea region that is predicted to be a climate change hot spot, due in part to the strengthening and extension of the East Australian Current (EAC). The monitoring is placed in the context of associated remotely-sensed data and ad-hoc physical net sampling of the macro-zooplankton and micronekton of ~2 to 20 cm length (small crustaceans, gelatinous, squid and fish) that dominate the mesopelagic open ocean basins in this region. We use a suite of ecological metrics (e.g. size, density, diversity, trophic linkages and energetic transfer) to describe and interpret interannual changes. We show that there is strong congruence in behaviour between multiple trophic levels, with synchronous diel vertical migration. We show marked differences in the productivity of plankton and micronekton across the Tasman Sea. Our ability to detect changes in these ecological units and the potential uptake of the data to ecological models is discussed. 145 Coastal ocean observations for fisheries Charitha Pattiaratchi1 1. The University of Western Australia, Nedlands, WA, Australia Integrated coastal observations provide information on the ocean in near-real time and help to understand oceanic processes and place them in a climatological context. This presentation is based on data collected in Western Australia using IMO infrastructure. The coastal observation system includes a number of platforms including ocean gliders, ocean Radar, mooring arrays supplemented by satellite imagery. Integration of the oceanographic data sets from these observation platforms reveal a number of important processes and phenomena related to fisheries. The main area of interest is located in the south-west of Australian continental shelf and slope regions offshore Fremantle extending northwards to Jurien Bay. Within this region there important topographic features such as the Rottnest Island and Perth Canyon and the circulation is dominated by the southward flowing Leeuwin Current (LC) with the northward flowing Leeuwin Undercurrent (LU) beneath the (LC) and the wind driven Capes Current (CC) located on the shelf, particularly during the summer months. The interaction between the LC and CC generate eddies which are generate high primary production. Data collected over the past few years from the observation array indicate year to year changes in the Capes Current an important conduit for Australian salmon migration. For example, during early 2016 high numbers of salmon were found in the Perth metropolitan region which could be related to the strong southerly winds experienced during the El Nino year resulting in a strong Capes Current and associated upwelling. Similarly, frontal system between the Ningaloo Current and coastal regions between North-west Cape and Dampier is an area of numbers of fish species. 146 Physical oceanographic influences on tropical reef and continental shelf fish from IMOS observations. Craig Steinberg1, Jessica Benthuysen1, Karen Wild-Allen2, David K Williams1, Hemerson Tonin1, Richard Brinkman1 1. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. Marine and Atmospheric Research, CSIRO, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia Australia’s Tropical Northern Seas encompass a region of rich oceanographic complexity and ecological diversity. IMOS observations extend from Ningaloo Reef in the west, the resource rich North West Shelf to Darwin and along Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef (GBR). One of the primary objectives of the Australian Government NCRIS funded IMOS arrays is to monitor boundary currents comprising of the Leeuwin, Holloway, Gulf of Papua and the East Australian Currents and their associated eddies. In addition cross-shelf exhanges are also observed through processes such as internal waves and subsurface cold water intrusions. Observations from satellite observations to in situ fixed and roving platforms reveal a rich amount of detail of the boundary currents which have a strong seasonal variation. Shelf waters exhibit a transition from well-mixed in winter to a strongly thermally stratified water column from spring-time warming through summer. Internal tides can then are able propagate into the shallower shelf water. Along the GBR there are periods of sustained cold and nutrient rich intrusions across the shelf through the reef matrix. In this paper a number of examples are provided across the tropical north showing how the environmental conditions can influence fish behaviour and feeding grounds. 147 A biogeography of the mesopelagic zone based on estimated myctophid biomass within Deep Scattering Layers Roland Proud1, Martin J Cox2, Andrew Brierley1 1. Pelagic Ecology Research Group, Scottish Oceans Institute, Gatty Marine Laboratory,, University of St Andrews, UK 2. Australian Antarctic Division, Kingston, Tasmania, Australia The mesopelagic zone (200 – 1000 m) may contain over 10 billion tonnes of fish, which is a potentially important future fishery resource. The major constituents of the mesopelagic fish community are myctophids (c. 250 species): although not fit for human consumption, they could be used as food for farmed animals and fish, and also as fertiliser for crops. During the daytime, myctophids form deep (300 – 1000 m), horizontally extensive (1000s of km) layers that are readily detectable with echosounders. The layers are known as Deep Scattering Layers (DSLs) because they scatter sound. At night, a proportion of fish in DSLs migrate upwards to access their prey (including zooplankton), and feed nearer the surface. The fish migrate to depth at dawn, and this 2-way vertical migration is an important process for vertical transport of nutrients and carbon in to the ocean interior. The depth and biomass of the mesopelagic community is influenced by environmental factors, giving rise to geographical variation. Akin to the surface biogeography described by A. Longhurst, which was based on primary production and regional oceanography, here we describe a mesopelagic biogeography, based on regional estimates of myctophid biomass and DSL depth, from a global dataset of echosounder observations. We estimate regional values of trophic efficiency and predict, using output from a coupled climate-ecosystem model (NEMO-MEDUSA-2.0), how these values may change by 2100. Ultimately, we provide a method for partitioning the ocean, across a range of scales, into distinct compartments/habitats, which are useful for mesopelagic study. In doing so, we highlight the differences in structure between the surface and mid-water communities and provide an informative map for both conservation and fisheries management. 148 New data and models to resolve ecosystem status and trends on the Kerguelen Axis in the Southern Indian Ocean Rowan Trebilco1, Andrea Walters2, Jessica Melbourne-Thomas1, 3, Martin Cox1, 3, Michael Sumner1, 3, Andrew Constable1, 3 1. ACE CRC, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. IMAS, Hobart, TAS, Australia 3. Australian Antarctic Division, Kingston, TAS, Australia The Southern Ocean is rapidly changing, with future environmental changes likely to have wide- reaching consequences for the structure and function of marine ecosystems. Along with well-designed sampling and observation programs, ecosystem models are the central means by which we can gain insight into how these changes affect ecosystems. Developing ecosystem models that can provide robust predictions and management advice depends on knowledge of environmental drivers and trophic linkages for constituent species. In the Southern Ocean, this information is largely lacking for the the mid- trophic level fish and squid groups that comprise major energy pathways making primary producers accessible to higher-order predators including whales, seals, penguins, flying seabirds. Knowledge of mid- trophic levels has also been identified as a key uncertainty for understanding top predator trophodynamics globally and this knowledge gap represents a major impediment to the development of conservation and management strategies. The Kerguelen Axis is the most important area for primary production in the Southern Indian Ocean, and a key area of interest for Australia. However, ecosystem structure and drivers in this region are poorly understood. In January to March 2016, the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems CRC led an integrated ecosystem survey program along a 8850 km path comprising 9 transects. The voyage track was designed to encompass major environmental transitions in the region including frontal features, the maximum extent of winter sea-ice coverage, and gradients of sea surface temperature and surface primary production, with extensive biological and oceanographic sampling. The goal of this voyage was to characterize pelagic foodweb structure and trophic linkages in this region and to pilot methodologies for future ecosystem observation and monitoring in the region. Here, we present a summary of the fish and squid sampling conducted on this voyage and show how empirical data are being coupled with modelling to better understand ecosystem status and trends in this region. 149 Looking into the future: seasonal to multi-year forecasts for fish and fisheries Alistair Hobday1 1. CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, Hobart, TAS, Australia Climate influences marine ecosystems on a range of time scales, from weather-scale (days) through to climate-scale (hundreds of years). While operational seasonal forecasts are now available for several Australian fisheries, understanding of interannual to decadal climate variability and impacts has received less attention. Predictability up to 10 years ahead may come from largescale climate modes in the ocean that can persist over these time scales. In Australia the key drivers of climate variability affecting the marine environment are the Southern Annular Mode, the Indian Ocean Dipole, the El Niño/Southern Oscillation, and the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation, each has phases that are associated with different ocean circulation patterns and regional environmental variables. Statistical and dynamical approaches are described to generate forecasts of climate drivers that can subsequently be translated to useful information for marine end users making decisions at these time scales. Considerable investment is still needed to support decadal forecasting including improvement of ocean-atmosphere models, enhancement of observing systems on all scales to support initiation of forecasting models, collection of important biological data, and integration of forecasts into decision support tools for fishers and managers. Collaboration between forecast developers and fishery users is needed to support forecast-based tactical and strategic decisions over seasonal to decadal time scales. 150 Mulloway anglers or citizen scientists? Lauren J Veale1, Nick Whiterod1 1. Nature Glenelg Trust, Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia Despite occurring across much of our coastline, there are still significant knowledge gaps in the life history, movement patterns and population structures of mulloway. With anglers dedicating their lives to catching a silver ghost, citizen science provides a cost effective and efficient way of advancing our knowledge of this species. In addition, the direct involvement of anglers has encouraged environmental stewardship and increased awareness on the importance of sustainable fisheries management. The research program, funded by Victorian Recreational Fishing License Fees, began in late 2014 and has seen over 300 frames donated by more than 60 anglers across Victoria. Donated samples, together with a small number of scientifically collected mulloway, range in total length from 51 to 150 cm and have been aged between 3 and 22 years. Preliminary investigation has identified a dominant 3+ age cohort in 2014, suggesting a strong recruitment event occurred in 2011. Majority of mulloway (90 %) have been caught from estuaries where individuals have predominantly been ≤ 85 cm and ≤ 6+ years, corresponding to the approximate estimate of 50 % maturity. The high abundance of juveniles in Victorian estuaries therefore highlights the importance of these systems as nursery areas. Preliminary growth curves indicate Victorian mulloway exhibit fast but highly varied growth rates, particularly in their early years. The partnership with recreational fishers continues to enable insight into the age structures, growth rates and reproductive characteristics of the species. Donations have also provided the necessary genetic information to clarify the current uncertainty surrounding stock structures of mulloway throughout Victoria and their connectivity with interstate subpopulations. 151 Aspects of the age, growth and reproductive cycle of tailor (Pomatomus saltatrix) in eastern Australia Hayden T Schilling1, 2, Julian M Hughes2, 3, John Stewart2, 3, Iain Suthers1, 2 1. Fisheries and Marine Environmental Research Laboratory, UNSW Australia, UNSW, NSW, Australia 2. Sydney Institute of Marine Science, Chowder Bay, NSW, Australia 3. New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Chowder Bay, NSW, Australia Tailor (Pomatomus saltatrix) is a globally distributed pelagic predator which is targeted by both recreational and commercial fisheries. Despite being the target of heavy recreational fishing in Eastern Australia, knowledge of the growth and reproductive cycles in this region is limited to mostly anecdotal stories. Regular samples from the commercial and recreational fisheries in NSW have provided insights into the population structure and dynamics of the tailor population. Ageing based upon otoliths shows comparable growth rates to other global stocks such as that off the east coast of America, although the age structure appears to be truncated in NSW, with fish older than 5 years old extremely rare. Using macroscopic staging of gonads and a gonadosomadic index, a previously unknown spawning period and location has been identified in Northern NSW in late summer. These findings reveal that the tailor population in eastern Australia is more complex than previously thought and has implications for the management of this ecologically and economically important pelagic species. 152 A cracking new improvement in the daily egg production method: Using in situ hybridisation for discerning Chrysophrys Auratus eggs and larvae. Mike Steer1, Gretchen Grammer, Melissa L Wos-Oxley , Emma Westlake, Sarah R Catalano, Andrew PA Oxley 1. SARDI (Aquatic Sciences), West Beach, SA, Australia Estimating biomass through quantifying egg production has become integral in the assessment and management of key fish stocks throughout the world. The Daily Egg Production Method (DEPM) is most widely used and despite its simplicity, its capability has generally been confined to species that produce eggs with distinct and identifiable morphologies. Relying on morphological criteria alone can present problems and there are examples where spawning biomass has been overestimated as a result of incorrect egg identification. Molecular validation of fish eggs and larvae is rapidly becoming an essential component of existing DEPM programs and provides a clear extension of the method to species where egg identification has been problematic. Validation methods have, so far, relied on destructive sampling, where eggs and larvae are initially identified, ascribed a developmental stage, and their DNA or RNA is chemically extracted for analysis. This process is applied to a sub-set of samples to determine a ‘correction factor’ and improve the confidence of the biomass estimate. In situ hybridisation (ISH) approaches may provide a more streamlined and non-destructive validation alternative. This involves the development of a species-specific oligonucleotide probe that targets ribosomal RNA to produce a colour reaction. Coloured eggs and larvae can then be identified under a standard stereo microscope, separated from mixed species samples, staged and archived. This study aims to investigate the feasibility of using ISH to validate snapper (Chrysophrys auratus) eggs and whole larvae from South Australian waters and subsequently extend the results to estimate the spawning biomass of this commercially important species using the DEPM. 153 Stochastic demographic analyses of the silvertip shark (Carcharhinus albimarginatus) and the common blacktip shark (Carcharhinus limbatus) from the Eastern Indo-Pacific Jonathan Smart, Andrew Chin1, Andrew Tobin1, William White2, Colin Simpfendorfer1 1. James Cook University, Townsville 2. CSIRO, Hobart Information on how shark populations respond to increases in fishing mortality (F) is critical to developing successful management and conservation strategies. However, data on catch, effort and abundance are often lacking for shark populations – preventing stock assessments from being conducted. Static demographic models circumvent this issue as they only require life history parameters. Age-structured Leslie Matrix models were developed and applied for silvertip shark Carcharhinus albimarginatus and common blacktip shark Carcharhinus limbatus populations from the Indo-Pacific region. Stochasticity was introduced to these models by varying vital rates though Monte Carlo Simulations. Varying levels of F were introduced to the analyses to determine how both species respond to fishing pressure. Management scenarios were further developed to determine strategies that could facilitate sustainable harvesting. The demographic estimates demonstrated that both species would have increasing populations when unfished (C. albimarginatus λ = 1.02 and C. limbatus λ = 1.04). However, both populations would decline when low levels of F (<0.05) were applied to all age-classes. The matrix elasticities revealed that changes to fertility elements had little effect on λ, while changes in juvenile survival produced the largest changes. However, age-at-first-capture analysis revealed protecting the juvenile life stage of both species would be an ineffective management strategy as both species mature at old ages. An age-at-last-capture analysis revealed that these species could be harvested while maintaining increasing populations through a gauntlet fishery. This required F to be restrained to individuals <100cm TL while protecting the older age-classes to preserve the breeding stock. This strategy would allow up to 20% of this length class to be harvested for both species before population declines would occur. However, this strategy is dependent on the ability to successfully protect all other age-classes from fishing – a strategy which may not be pragmatic in developing nations where little regulation occurs. 154 Catch composition of a traditional Indonesian shark fishery operating off north-western Australia Lindsay Marshall 1, Jenny Giles2, Grant J Johnson3 1. Stick Figure Fish Illustration, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2. Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University, Pacific Grove, CA, USA 3. Department of Primary Industry and Fisheries, Darwin, NT, Australia For centuries Indonesian fishers have harvested marine organisms from waters off north Australia. This has continued under an Australian and Indonesian Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), signed in 1974, that allows traditional Indonesian fishers access to 48,000 km2 off north-western Australia. In this area, known as the MOU Box, Indonesian fishers fish for sedentary organisms, finfish, and sharks which are believed to have come under greater fishing pressure over the past decade. Despite concern, and in contrast to other Australian shark fisheries, little work has been done quantifying catch composition, a prerequisite for effective fisheries management. Establishing the catch composition in this fishery is challenging because the catch can only be inspected post capture and is retained as parts, such as fins. In this project novel techniques were used to identify all sharks on nine traditional Indonesian vessels operating in the MOU Box. Photos and tissue samples were collected from 152 dorsal fins and were identified to species using expert visual identification and DNA methods. Sixteen different species belonging to the families Carcharhinidae (Whalers) and Sphyrnidae (Hammerheads) were identified. The most abundant species were Sandbar Shark Carcharhinus plumbeus and Tiger Shark Galeocerdo cuvier, representing 43.4% and 29.6% of the total catch, respectively (from a catch with an estimated weight of 10.5 tonnes). Furthermore, we tested two semi-automated fin identification methods, developed for field use by non-fin experts. These methods varied in success, with the morphometric identification technique achieving 69% accuracy and the FAO iSharkFin program only 29% accuracy. This project provides fundamental catch information for the management of northwest Australian shark fisheries, both in and outside the MOU Box. Our study demonstrates the value of validating semi-automated methods using diagnostic expertise and also highlights the difficulties associated with applying these methods to varying assemblages. If adopted more widely, the techniques used in this study can be used to improve the accuracy of global elasmobranch fisheries data. 155 Arthurs Lake – estimating the trout population size of a large impoundment fishery. Tim Farrell1, Rob Freeman1 1. Inland Fisheries Service, New Norfolk, TAS, Australia Arthurs Lake is a wild brown trout recreational fishery that has not been stocked for 70 years. The inflowing streams provide large of areas suitable for spawning and thus the lake gets ample recruitment when conditions are favourable. Between 2009 and 2014 good rainfall events enabled successful recruitment to the lake for five consecutive years. The population of brown trout since this period has been large and resulted in a reduced potential for growth and consequently a small average sized fish, less than 400 grams. The Inland Fisheries Service as managers of the brown trout fisheries in Tasmania have sought to improve the average size of trout at Arthurs Lake with the aim of achieving an average weight of one kilogram. The installation of barriers to upstream migration on three of the lakes spawning creeks together with trapping facilities was completed in 2014 in order to achieve that aim. The quantum of fish to be removed from the fishery to achieve the aim has not been determined, neither has the current size of the brown trout population in the lake. Determining the size of the population of brown trout at Arthurs Lake is problematic due it is a large storage of 65km2 and 511,550Ml at full supply level. Further to this, the actual number of fish in the lake has never been quantified thus the upper limits are unknown. A mark and recapture study is proposed for 2017 utilising spawning trout as the marked population. An in-lake recapture phase will occur post spawning period after sufficient mixing with the non-spawning population of fish. Using the 2016 spawning run a pilot study has commenced to examine tag loss, mixing time and other factors that may influence the estimate. 156 Bridging the Land-Sea divide for future food security. Richard S. Cottrell1, Aysha Fleming1, 2, Elizabeth A. Fulton1, 2, Kirsty L. Nash1, Reg Watson 1, Julia L. Blanchard 1 1. Centre for Marine Socioecology, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania 2. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere , Hobart, Tasmania Meeting food demands for the 10 billion people expected by 2050 presents a paradox. Globally, consumers are becoming more urbanised and wealthier, increasing per capita demands on natural resources. Meanwhile, over 1 in 7 people still have insufficient access to safe and nutritious food to allow them a healthy and active life. Thus, the food security challenge is twofold; sustainably meeting consumption demands from a burgeoning population; and feeding the world’s under-nourished communities. Advances in terrestrial and aquatic production efficiencies have been proposed to solve the issue but largely in isolation. We argue that production systems on land and sea are fundamentally linked through economic markets and the Earth’s biosphere and therefore cannot be considered independently. This presentation reviews published interactions between terrestrial and aquatic elements of the food system and suggests a more integrated approach to addressing the food security challenge. Further the role of sectoral connectivity in social and environmental sustainability is discussed. 157 Environmental and socio-political shocks to the seafood sector: what does this mean for resilience? Lessons from two case studies, Atlantic mackerel and Atlantic salmon Marcello Graziano1, Clive J Fox2, Karen A Alexander3, Cristina Pita4, Sheila JJ Heymans2, Margaret Crumlish5, Adam Hughes2, Joly Ghanawi5, Lorenzo Cannella6 1. Department of Geography, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, Michigan, United States 2. Department of Ecology, Scottish Association for Marine Science, Oban, Argyll, United Kingdom 3. Centre for Marine Socioecology, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 4. Department of Environment and Planning & Centre for Environmental and Marine Studies, University of Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal 5. Institute of Aquaculture, University of Stirling, Stirling, United Kingdom 6. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, University of Genova, Genoa, Italy Farmed and capture fisheries products have become important globally traded commodities. This can lead to social and economic dependency in the regions where production occurs. Major shocks (environmental or socio-political) to demand and supply may affect the resilience of the seafood sector and the associated dependent producing regions. Here, we describe the results of a collaborative and interdisciplinary expert workshop on how two particular seafood industries, farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and North-east mackerel (Scomber scombrus), have responded to such shocks and what this means for sectoral and regional resilience. We identified several key findings. Firstly, we established that a reliance on healthy natural ecosystems, the existence of outside drivers for production and certain employment patterns were elements of low resilience. Secondly, we pinpointed industry consolidation and the central role of government in assisting the seafood sector as elements of high resilience. Moreover, we found that the farmed salmon and wild mackerel industries share characteristics which have enabled them to be resilient to many of the shocks which have affected them in recent years. Our approach aimed to expand the seafood production debate from purely ‘food security’ based themes to an interdisciplinary paradigm which incorporates social and ecological sustainability. The approach taken in this study seemed particularly effective in analysing a sector which cuts across ecological, economic, social and political spheres and may be well placed to contribute towards emerging approaches in ecosystem based management. 158 Relationships between Maori freshwater values and flow: developing tools for incorporating cultural fisheries values into flow management decisions. Shannan K Crow1, Gail Tipa2, Doug J Booker1 1. NIWA, Christchurch, New Zealand 2. Tipa and Associates Ltd, Dunedin, New Zealand Sustainable use of freshwater resources requires managers to understand the relationships between flow and instream values. While these relationships are available for most freshwater biota, limited tools are available that quantify the relationships between flow and cultural values. The present study aimed to develop quantitative relationships between Maori freshwater values and flow magnitude. A score card was developed that quantified how observed flows supported fisheries and cultural values. Cultural health scores were recorded across a variety of flow magnitudes for each of five Rivers in the South Island of New Zealand. Mixed-effects models were then fitted to see: 1) if relationships were present between flow magnitude and cultural health; 2) if these relationships differed between streams and participants. There was a positive relationship between flow and cultural health scores after differences between sites and observers were standardised. If differences between sites and observers were ignored, there was a positive relationship between flow and cultural health that only explained 5% of the variation in cultural health scores. If differences between sites and observers were accounted for in the analysis, there was a positive relationship between flow and cultural health that explained 61% of the variation in cultural health scores. The present study provides a framework for quantifying relationships between cultural health and flows at different sites. Results suggest that these relationships could be developed into quantitative tools that could be used improve flow management decisions. 159 Creating outcomes for Maori communities and taonga freshwater fisheries through collaborative research partnerships Erica K Williams1, Jacques AT Boubée1 1. National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand The wellbeing of many Maori (indigenous peoples of New Zealand) communities has long relied on the sustainable use of freshwater resources, where species like tuna (freshwater eels), koura (freshwater crayfish) and kakahi (freshwater mussels) once supported local and regional economies with significant food and resources. The Treaty of Waitangi forms the underlying foundation of the Crown-Māori relationship with regard to freshwater resources in New Zealand. In recent times, Treaty settlements have resulted in assets of strategic importance being returned to Māori. Many of these settlements are concerned with the co-management, protection and restoration of values, uses and services that have not previously been a priority for environmental research, restoration and monitoring by government and research agencies. New Zealand’s evolving co-management context is an opportunity to co-develop research methods, tools and products that inform new and innovative approaches for the protection, restoration and economic development of taonga (treasured) freshwater species. This requires: (1) A focus on Maori values/uses/opportunities and research priorities; (2) Development of Maori capacity in freshwater research, management and policy; (3) The flexibility to respond to the strategic needs of resource managers as the co-management landscape evolves; and (4) Interdisciplinary collaborations to develop credible cross-cultural approaches that engage our communities, and empower both matauranga Maori (Maori knowledge) and science-based knowledge systems. In 2001 the National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA) established Te Kuwaha, the National Centre of Maori Environmental Research. Over the last 15 years NIWA has been co-delivering freshwater fisheries research of benefit to Maori, and helping to develop Maori research capability and capacity. Using freshwater eel research as one example, in this presentation we provide insights into some of the successful collaborative partnerships we have been privileged to be part of. 160 Development of a Harvest control rule (HCR) for Australia’s Torres Strait tropical rock lobster (TRL) fishery Roy Deng1, Eva Plagányi1, Darren Dennis1, Trevor Hutton1, Robert Campbell2 1. CSIRO, St Lucia, QLD, Australia 2. CSIRO, Aspendale, VIC, Australia ABSTRACT The Torres Strait tropical rock lobster Panulirus ornatus fishery, provides employment for greater than 400 indigenous fishers as well as a small non-indigenous sector. The fishery is transitioning from input controls to a quota managed system, necessitating the development of an effective harvest strategy and TAC setting process. This is to take into account changes in the methods used, as well as the survey frequency and timing, to achieve defined biological, economic and socio-cultural objectives of the lobster fishery. This presentation provides a brief summary of the testing and development of a new empirical Harvest Control Rule (HCR), a description of the current TAC setting process and some alternative options for future implementation. We highlight the performance of alternative candidate empirical HCRs using stakeholder input and demonstrate the advantages for the future TAC setting process. For each HCR, there are a large number of performance statistics output, based on the reference points developed for the fishery, for consideration by stakeholders. A smaller set of the key outcomes of the HCR testing are presented here. 161 Hangin in ya PJs: Social networks in Port Jackson sharks Johann Mourier1, Nathan C Bass1, Jo Day2, Nathan Knott3, Culum Brown1 1. Macquarie University, NSW, Australia 2. Taronga Zoo, Mossman, NSW, Australia 3. Fisheries NSW , DPI, Huskisson, NSW, Australia An increasing number of shark species have been reported to show some site-specific reproductive philopatry in which males and/or females return to the same location for mating and/or parturition. These patterns have mainly been found in tropical species. Here we used acoustic telemetry to demonstrate that both sexes of Port-Jackson sharks, a temperate endemics of Australia, return to the exact same reef in Jervis Bay to mate and reproduce after foraging in Southern Australia over summer. We used this mating aggregation ground to investigate the social interactions between individuals using a telemetry approach combined with genetic analysis to improve our understanding of the mating strategies of this iconic species. Our results demonstrate that males and females have complex dyadic interactions which can persist over multiple years, despite undertaking long distance annual migrations to foraging grounds following mating. While there are high levels of relatedness at each breeding location, genetic relatedness did not drastically influence association patterns. These findings revealed that these mating grounds represent social arenas in which interactions are far more complex than previously expected. This preliminary results provide additional information on improving our understanding of evolution of reproduction and social behavior in elasmobranchs which has profound implications for conservation management. 162 Crossing paths and time budgets: pelagic sharks and human activities in Spencer Gulf and the Great Australian Bight Paul J Rogers1, Micheal Drew1 1. SARDI Aquatic Sciences, Henley Beach, SA, Australia Functional co-existence between humans and large marine predators invloves complex social and practical challenges for the community, industries, and managers of marine resources, threatened and protected species. In 2015, we investigated the time budgets of individual white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) and bronze whalers (Carcharhinus brachyurus) in gulf and continental shelf areas used by commercial fisheries, fin-fish aquaculture, cage-dive tourism, and the community during recreational activities. Satellite (10, C. carcharias) and acoustic telemetry (134, both spp.) were used at finfish aquaculture leases, in areas used by commercial fisheries, at long-nosed fur seal and Australian sea lion colonies and haul-outs, and hypothesised migration paths and bathymetric features linking these areas and habitats. Bronze whalers and white sharks exhibited dissimilar seasonal patterns of visitation and short-term residency at offshore islands and reefs along isobaths adjacent to fur seal and Australian sea lion colonies, and areas frequented by teleost prey. New data describing the fine- and large-scale movements of white sharks will be presented, which will assist with the ongoing resolution of multi-jurisdictional, regional, and industry-specific management processes. 163 Using an individual-based simulation of kinesis, advection and movement behaviours in Pacific skipjack tuna to examine assumptions in stock assessment Joe Scutt Phillips1, Alex Sen Gupta1, Erik van Sebille2, Michael Lange2, Inna N Senina3, Patrick Lehodey3, Simon Nicol4 1. Climate Change Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2. Grantham Institute, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom 3. Division Oceanographie Spatiale, Collecte Localisation Satellite, Ramonville St Agnes, France 4. Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences, Canberra, NSW, Australia The western and central Pacific Ocean supports the world’s largest tuna fishery, with skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis) constituting over 60% of the catch from this region. Stock assessment models that provide scientific advice for the management of skipjack and other pelagic species are typically Eulerian in nature. As such, they rely on assumptions of stock transfer rates between regions, mixing of individuals within a population, and homogeneity at fixed spatial scales. Altering these assumptions can have profound effects on the estimated abundance and spatial distribution of this heavily exploited species. Using Eulerian models, it is also non-trivial to represent the changes in mesoscale distribution due to ocean dynamics, range contraction due to population depletion, and interactions between tuna conspecifics or prey. A Lagrangian, or individual-based, approach to modelling fish distribution allows many of these assumptions to be tested in a framework that is structured on the fundamental unit of ecology: the individual. Here, we detail such an approach using Pacific skipjack as an application. The model extends a newly developed Lagrangian ocean particle-tracking simulator by incorporating directed movement, non-directional kinesis, and random-walk behaviours. First replicating the spatial density evolution of a current advection-diffusion distribution model of skipjack tuna populations, we then discuss the effect on meso- and large-scale distribution of alternate behavioural scenarios at the individual level. Individual-based models provide a valuable tool to analyse the assumptions behind our understanding of free-roaming animals that are difficult to observe. In the case of skipjack and other species of Pacific tuna, anticipated uses of this tool are the simulation of tagging experiments to aid design, the effect of changing habitat on mixing rates, and interaction with drifting fish aggregating devices. 164 Determining demographic processes responsible for dramatic changes in South Australia's snapper fisheries Anthony Fowler1, Paul Hamer2, Jodie Kemp2 1. SARDI, West Beach, SA, Australia 2. Fisheries Victoria, Queenscliff, Victoria, Australia The relative significance of fish movement and local reproduction and recruitment as input demographic processes for fish populations can be challenging to differentiate. Nevertheless, it is significant to do so, from the perspective of understanding stock structure and appropriate spatial scales for management. Snapper is the most significant coastal, marine finfish fishery species of South Australia. During the 2000s, its component regional fisheries underwent unprecedented changes in spatial structure: an episodic fishery developed in the south east (SE) region; annual catches in Northern Gulf St. Vincent (NGSV) increased exponentially to record levels; whilst catches from Northern (NSG) and Southern Spencer Gulf (SSG) declined to their lowest levels. The demographic and fishery-related processes that underpinned these changes were unclear, which hampered developing appropriate management responses. This study used the analysis of otolith chemistry to assess the relative significance of inter-regional movement and local recruitment as input processes to the different regional populations. Transverse sections of otoliths from four year classes collected from six different regional fisheries were analysed using laser ablation – inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. These provided age-related estimates of elemental concentrations for Ba, Sr, Mn and Mg that were compared amongst regions. The data were interpreted to indicate the regions of origin and subsequent migration patterns of fish. The episodic fishery in the SE was related to variable recruitment into Port Phillip Bay, Victoria and subsequent mass emigration out of the bay and then westward over a distance of approximately 600 km, indicating that the Western Victorian Stock extended well into South Australian waters. Alternatively, the snapper populations in NGSV and NSG were considered separate stocks that were not connected by adult fish movement, whose contrasting trends in fishable biomass related to different recruitment patterns since the late 1990s. 165 Partial migration of grey mullet (Mugil cephalus) on Australia’s east coast revealed by otolith chemistry Ash Fowler1, Shannen Smith2, David Booth2, John Stewart1 1. NSW DPI Fisheries, Sydney 2. UTS, Sydney Partial migration affects the ecology and evolution of animal populations, and is an important consideration for the management of harvested species, yet the phenomenon is understudied in fish. We provide the first insights into partially diadromous migration of grey mullet (Mugil cephalus) in Australia by examining the otolith chemistry of old individuals (aged 710 years) from two regions on the east coast. Strontium and Barium concentrations were measured across the otolith using laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) and indicated considerable diversity in migratory histories among individuals. Only 15% of individuals made repeated movements from estuaries to the marine environment, consistent with the annual spawning run in the region. The remainder either made irregular movements between salinity environments (70%), or resided in estuaries or fresh water for their entire life following the early juvenile stage (15%). The patterns are consistent with ‘skipped spawning’ partial migration, where a proportion of the mature population forgoes spawning each year. If confirmed, the behaviour may afford the east coast population of M. cephalus some resilience to fishing pressure on the annual spawning run. 166 Temporal and spatial variation in strontium in a tropical river: implications for otolith chemistry analyses of fish migration David Crook1, Katherine Lacksen1, Alison King1, Duncan Buckle1, Steven Tickell2, Jonathon Woodhead3, Roland Maas3, Simon Townsend2, Michael Douglas1, 4 1. Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT, Australia 2. Northern Territory Department of Land Resource Management, NT Government, Darwin, NT, Australia 3. School of Earth Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia 4. School of Earth and Environment, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia Analysis of otolith strontium isotope ratios 87Sr/86Sr is an increasingly utilised approach for studying fish migration within freshwater and across salinity gradients. A premise of this approach is that freshwater 87Sr/86Sr ratios are temporally stable within a location, allowing variation in otolith87Sr/86Sr to be interpreted as movement by fish. We analysed surface and groundwater from the Daly River catchment in the wet-dry tropics of Northern Australia over two years. Analyses of otolith 87Sr/86Sr ratios were also conducted for freshwater Sooty grunter (Hephaestus fuliginosus) and the putatively diadromous Ord River mullet (Liza ordensis). Spatial variation in freshwater 87Sr/86Sr ratios was high (range: 0.71612-0.78059) and there was strong seasonality in water 87Sr/86Sr ratios, with highest values in the wet season. Temporal variation in water 87Sr/86Sr ratios is attributed to seasonal patterns in surface run-off from headwaters of ancient geologic origin versus input from groundwater aquifers interacting with younger geological formations. Temporal variation in water 87Sr/86Sr ratios precluded robust inference on movement within freshwater for both species, although movement across salinity gradients by Ord River mullet was clearly identified. We conclude that temporally and spatially replicated water Sr data should be a general requisite for studies that use analyses of otolith Sr (87Sr/86Sr, Sr/Ca, Sr/Ba) to make inferences about fish movement and migration. 167 Seasonal forecasting of dolphinfish distribution in eastern Australia to aid recreational fishers and managers Stephanie Brodie1, Alistair J Hobday2, James A Smith1, Claire M Spillman3, Jason R Hartog2, Jason D Everett1, Matt D Taylor4, Charles A Gray5, Iain M Suthers1 1. School of BEES, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia 2. Oceans and Atmosphere, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 3. Bureau of Meteorology, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 4. Port Stephens Fisheries Institute, New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Nelson Bay, New South Wales, Australia 5. WildFish Research, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia Seasonal forecasting of environmental conditions and marine species distribution has been used as a decision support tool in commercial and aquaculture fisheries. These tools may also be applicable to species targeted by the recreational fisheries sector, a sector that is increasing its use of marine resources, and making important economic and social contributions to coastal communities around the world. Here, a seasonal forecast of the habitat and relative abundance of dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus), based on sea surface temperatures, was developed for the east coast of New South Wales (NSW), Australia. Two prototype forecast products were created; geographic spatial forecasts of dolphinfish habitat and a latitudinal summary identifying the location of fish abundance peaks. The less detailed latitudinal summary was created to limit the resolution of habitat information to prevent potential resource over-exploitation by fishers in the absence of total catch controls. The forecast dolphinfish habitat model was most accurate at the start of the annual dolphinfish migration in NSW (November and December). Habitat forecasts for December were useful up to 5 months ahead, but other months showed variable performance as the lead time for the habitat forecasts increased. The continued development and application of seasonal forecasts will help fishery industries cope with future uncertainty and promote dynamic marine resource management. 168 Creating win-win scenarios for longer term monitoring of the marine domain? Stewart Frusher1, Gretta Pecl1 1. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia Monitoring the marine world is becoming increasingly important as greater attention is being placed on the marine domain for ecosystem services such as food, recreation, transport, and energy. These services are also being impacted by changes in environmental parameters associated with climate change that are altering ecosystems through the change in abundance, phenology and distribution and interactions of the species that comprise ecosystems. Major biological monitoring programs that rely on continued scientific collection are becoming harder to fund as funding diminishes and funding bodies look for short term outputs (e.g. 3 year cycles). The challenge that marine biological monitoring currently faces is the need to collect samples frequently and across greater spatial scales than previously undertaken but in a cost efficient manner. Using recreational and commercial users of the marine domain may provide the opportunity to gather data at greater spatial scales including from regions difficult to sample, and at a frequency that could never be achieved using scientific sampling teams. In this presentation we will demonstrate two examples. The first will show the potential of the fishing industry using a recently developed project that provides win-win outcomes for fishers and scientific monitoring. The second example will focus on the use of citizen scientists using the example of REDMAP, an innovative range extension database that engages divers, fishers and boaters in reporting unusual sightings, and how this information is greatly extending available information on the changing distributions of marine species. 169 Baited Underwater Video for an integrated monitoring network: Developing indicators and an appropriate national framework. Neville S Barrett1, Euan Harvey2, Nicole Hill1 1. IMAS, UTas, -South Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. Departmend of Environment and Agriculture, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia One of the key priority areas identified by the national science plan is the development of a national integrated monitoring pprogram, particularly one that provides for the monitoring needs of the new CMR network in shelf waters. For coral and rocky reef fish assemblages, baited underwater video is now a mature sampling thechnique that is both ffective in water below typical dive sensus depths, and is non-intrusive, so fits methods appropriate for sampling in areas such as state MPA’s and CMR’s where intrusive methods may be limited. Currently most BUV research is state-based, and while some states such as WA and NSW have extensive BUV programs that are integrated within the State (e.g. the NSW MPA monitoring program) there is no national coordination of surveys or agreed standardisation of methods (although methods are usually similar). The new CMR network and associated monitoring needs may act as a catalyst for this, and this talk explores the potential for establishing a working partnership between state/commonwealth agencies and universities to further the vision of the Marine Science Plan in this space. One essential component of a monitoring program is the development of appropriate indicators in this space for regional and national SOE reporting and the Marine Biodiversity Hub has been exploring these during field programs in several CMRs. Preliminary findings will be discussed here. 170 Look out behind! Are additional cameras in baited video worthwhile? Sasha K Whitmarsh1, Peter G Fairweather1, Charlie Huveneers1 1. School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia The increasing popularity of baited cameras to assess fish assemblages offers the opportunity to improve the design and thus information that can be obtained from using such devices. In all currently published Baited Remote Underwater Video Station (BRUVS) studies, cameras are oriented forward, towards the bait bag. We hypothesised that using cameras oriented in all directions to provide a 360° view of the habitat and associated fish assemblages will increase species richness and abundance estimates. We used single BRUVS set-ups with 4 GoPro cameras per frame, facing forward, behind, and to both sides of the unit to test this. We conducted our study in a range of habitats (seagrass, reef, wreck, and soft sediment) to determine whether the benefits of using this 360° set-up were consistent across habitats and fish communities. We analysed each video and compared them individually and cumulatively and found that some species and individuals were not visible on the forward-facing camera. A cost-benefit analysis of whether the increased field and processing time is justified by the increased species numbers and abundance was also performed. This study quantifies the benefits of using additional cameras and provides an example of modifications that can be applied to BRUVS to collect further information on the fish assemblages observed. 171 Converging new technologies allow improved methods for tracking sharks and acquiring contemporaneous environmental data. Kim Holland1, Carl Meyer1, Tiphaine du Dot2 1. Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology, Kaneohe, Hawaii 2. University of British Columbia, Vancouver Innovations in both hardware and software technology are converging to allow improved precision in tracking sharks while simultaneously acquiring information regarding ambient ocean conditions in near-real time. These technologies include fast acquisition GPS, on-board analysis of ocean temperature and oxygen profiles and deployment of land-based receivers to augment throughput of data that has previously been soley reliant on satellite coverage. In particular, the use of land based receivers has significantly increased the amount of data that can be acquired from increasingly sophisticated tags and these data are available in near-real time. Here we present examples of the integration of these technologies by presenting initial results of tracks acquired from hammerhead and tiger sharks tagged in Hawaiian waters. 172 Use of baited remote underwater video systems (BRUVs) to estimate presence and size of juvenile white sharks Carcharodon carcharias David Harasti1, Kate A Lee1, Roger Laird1, Russ Bradford2, Barry Bruce2 1. NSW DPI, Taylors Beach, NSW, Australia 2. CSIRO, Hobart, Tasmania Baited remote underwater video systems (BRUVs) are commonly used to assess fish assemblages and, more recently, to record the localised abundance and size of sharks. This study investigated the occurrence and size of white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) in the near-shore environment off Bennett’s Beach, part of a known nursery area for the species in central New South Wales, Australia. Six stereo-BRUV units were deployed approximately fortnightly between August and December 2015 for periods of five hours in depths of 7 to 14 m. BRUVs successfully recorded 34 separate sightings of 22 individual white sharks. The highest number of individuals detected during a single day survey was eight (1.6 sharks/ per hour of BRUVs sampling). All C. carcharias observed on BRUVs were juveniles ranging in size from 1.50 m to 2.46 m total length (mean size of 1.91 m ± 0.05 S.E, n=22). The time to first appearance ranged from 15 to 299 mins (mean 148 mins ± 15 mins). This study demonstrates that the use of stereo-BRUVs is a viable non-destructive method to obtain estimates of size and presence of white sharks, and may be useful to estimate relative abundance in near-shore environments where they are known to frequent. 173 The evolution and influence of Commonwealth fishery and stock status reporting Lee Georgeson1, Ilona Stobutzki1, Simon Nicol1 1. Department of Agriculture and Water Resources, Canberra, ACT, Australia The ABARES Fishery status reports have played a key role in the evolution of Commonwealth fisheries policy and management in Australia since first produced in 1992. Nearly 25 years later, it is timely to reflect on this contribution and consider how these reports might continue to influence Australian fisheries in the years to come. Over time, the classification framework has changed slightly but has been based on biomass—that is, the weight or number of fish in a stock, and fishing mortality—that is, the rate at which the stocks are being fished. In line with United Nations guidelines, the reports consider these biological indicators in the context of limit reference points. The reports also consider progress towards target reference points, including maximum sustainable yield and/or maximum economic yield. Despite the Fisheries Management Act 1991 being in place, a worsening trend in fish stock status coupled with poor economic performance through the 1990s and early 2000s led to a Ministerial Direction in 2005 to cease overfishing and recover overfished stocks. Key elements of this Direction were the Securing our Fishing Future structural adjustment package and the development of a best-practice harvest strategy policy. These, along with a number of other initiatives, have led to a stark turnaround in the biological and economic performance of a number of Commonwealth fisheries. Since the 2005 Ministerial Direction, the percentage of stocks classified as not overfished and not subject to overfishing has increased markedly, while the percentage of stocks classified as uncertain, or overfished and subject to overfishing, has decreased. The Fishery status reports have provided a benchmark and a legacy for fisheries science and management in Australia. Future opportunities include strengthening links with other jurisdictional fisheries management and reporting frameworks and consideration of more comprehensive reporting against target reference points. 174 The status of Australia's fish stocks in relation to the total catch and economic value Fay Helidoniotis1 1. Australia Bureau of Agricultural Resource Economics and Sciences, Canberra ACT, ACT, Australia Australia’s Commonwealth government has the responsibility of managing fish stocks between 3-200nm. To assist in the sustainability of fish stocks a classification system has been developed where the status of stocks are broadly categorised as overfished or not overfished. Two broad jurisdictions exist: Commonwealth sole-managed fisheries and Commonwealth jointly-managed fisheries. Focussing on the former, the status of 65 stocks of the Commonwealth sole - managed jurisdiction were evaluated in 2014, and 7 stocks were reported to be overfished. Total catch, gross value of production (GVP) and stock status are typically presented separately and therefore it is not immediately clear what the stock status is in the context of the total catch and GVP. Specifically, it is not known whether the catch of the overfished stocks contribute to a large proportion or small proportion of the total catch of the Commonwealth sole managed fisheries. The Australian Bureau of Resources Economic and Sciences (ABARES) collects a large array of data on the total catch and GVP of over 100 fish stocks. Stock status is mainly determined by the current level of fishing mortality and the current level of biomass relative to its unfished state. While it is a concerning issue to management and policy that 11% of stocks are classified as overfished, results indicate that that this only represents a small proportion (approx. 5%) of the total catch and economic value of those fisheries solely managed by the Commonwealth. Quantifying the proportion overfished in the context of total catch will enable a better understanding of the level of risk that overfished stocks present to the total biomass and economic value of Commonwealth fisheries. Furthermore, overfishing of these stocks may misrepresent and overinflate the economic value of fisheries and may subsequently lead to false long term economic and social expectations. 175 Twenty-Five Years of Quota Management of Australia’s South-East Fishery – Success or Failure? Kevin Rowling It is now 25 years since the Australian Government announced a major policy initiative concerning the future management of Commonwealth fisheries. The “New Directions” policy commenced in 1990 and mandated the use of Individual Transferable Catch Quotas (ITQs) under a biologically determined Total Allowable Catch (TAC) as the preferred management control. In 1992 ITQs were allocated across sixteen of the main species in the trawl sector of the South East Fishery (SEF). The new policy had three simple objectives: to ensure the conservation of fisheries resourcesand the environment which sustains them; to maximise the economic efficiency of the industry; and to collect an appropriate charge from fishers who were exploiting a community resource for private gain. A review of developments in the SEF since the implementation of quota management suggests that none of the three objectives have been successfully achieved. In 2014/15 fishers in the SEF landed only 40% (7,718 t) of the total TAC (18,965 t) for the sixteen main species. For seven of these species the TAC was very significantly under-caught (<25% of TAC landed). The TAC was more than 50% caught for only five species out of the sixteen. The status of many stocks in the SEF can be described as ‘concerning’ - i.e. the stock has declined, or appears to be declining, to a very low level. The actual economic status of the SEF is difficult to determine, but there is strong evidence that real net economic returns in the trawl sector declined by more than 50% between 1995 and 2011. This was despite two rounds of Government funded structural adjustments in 1997 and 2007 which removed significant numbers of vessel permits (and some quota) from the fishery. Resistance by fishers to the introduction of quotas, and the overfished status of some of the main stocks, appears to have prevented the collection of any ‘resource rent’ from fishers for the use of publicly owned resources. 176 Using MSC certification of a commercial and recreational crab fishery in Western Australia to achieve social licence Emily A Fisher1 1. Department of Fisheries, Perth, WA, Australia Western Australian estuaries have been fished for as long as humans have inhabited the surrounding areas, with the first commercial estuarine fisheries established in the early 1800s. Over time, population growth and an increasing number of recreational fishers has led to greater competition for the estuarine resources and buy-outs of commercial fishers have been implemented in some estuaries to reduce conflict between user groups. In the Peel-Harvey Estuary near Mandurah, a recent Government initiative has supported the commercial and recreational fishing sectors to work together to promote their sustainability and ensure future access to the resources. In a world first, the commercial and recreational fisheries for PeelHarvey Estuary blue swimmer crabs have been jointly assessed against the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) standard for sustainable fishing. Although certification is expected to provide both sectors with a social licence to continue fishing the estuary, the process has also presented a number of challenges that will need to be addressed over the next five years. This talk will focus on the gaps identified as part of the MSC assessment and outlines the strategies and research plans proposed to deal with the conditions placed on these fisheries. 177 Management Strategy Evaluation for a Multi-Sector Highly Variable Fishery: the South-East Australian ‘Western’ Snapper Stock Athol Whitten1, Paul Hamer2 1. Mezo Research, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2. Fisheries Victoria, Queenscliff, Victoria Two of the biggest challenges facing fisheries managers and policy makers are how to effectively manage multi-sector fisheries and how to design harvest strategies for fisheries with highly variable productivity. The ‘western’ snapper (Chrysophrys auratus) stock is Victoria’s most important finfish fishery, and harvesting occurs by both recreational and licensed commercial fishers. To add complexity, the stock’s productivity is highly variable, owing to the influence of biotic and abiotic features of the stock’s primary breeding grounds. These effects lead to large fluctuations in annual recruitment, and years later, to corresponding changes in the productivity of the fishery. Here we describe the development of a Management Strategy Evaluation (MSE) framework built upon Stock Synthesis (SS3) and the ss3sim package in R, allowing for the exploration of multiple alternative harvest strategies. Tested strategies aim to balance total yield from the fishery, sustain the spawning biomass above some target reference point, and also deal with changes in productivity owing to highly variable recruitment success. The MSE framework is an objective quantitative tool to help managers, policy makers, and other stakeholders understand the performance, implications, and trade-offs associated with alternative management strategies. This in turn aids the decision making process with regard to management controls that affect both the recreational and commercial aspects of the fishery, while still meeting the overall requirements of resource sustainability. 178 Effects of climate change on coral trout and associated fisheries Morgan Pratchett1, Vanessa Messmer1 1. James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia Sustainably managing coastal fisheries in the face of increasing fisheries demands and widespread degradation of critical coastal habitats is now being made even more challenging due to effects of global climate change. Effects of climate change compound upon direct anthropogenic disturbances to coastal habitats and have particularly pronounced effect on coral reef habitats. Coral reef fisheries are therefore, extremely vulnerable to ongoing climate change, not only due to ongoing degration of critical habitats, but there is also evidence that current environmental regimes are already pushing the physiological limits of heavily targeted reef fishes, such as coral trout. This talk will summarise recent research into direct and indirect effects of climate change on coral trout (Plectropomus spp) on Australia's Great Barrier Reef (GBR), as well presenting a brief overview of potential adaptation options necessary to ensure viable commercial and recreational fisheries. Of significant note, is that the thermal sensitivity of coral trout is largely invariant along the length of the GBR, such that northern populations are already being exposed to summertime temperatures that exceed their performance optima. Accordingly, catches of coral trout in the northern GBR are very low during summer, potentially due energy conservation strategies and/ or movement of fishes to cooler, deepwater habitats. Biological and socio-economic research is ongoing, but it is clear that increasing climatic impacts necessitate a review of current management arrangements for commercial and recreational fisheries on the GBR. 179 Establishment risk models highlight biosurveillance priorities for New Zealand lakes Nicholas Ling1, John Leathwick2, Kevin Collier1, Brendan Hicks1, Glen Stitchbury1, Mary de Winton3 1. The University of Waikato, .Hamilton, ., New Zealand 2. Conservation Planning & Management, Hamilton, New Zealand 3. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Hamilton, New Zealand The ability to predict invasive species spread is essential for effective biosecurity management and the allocation of monitoring effort. Prevention of invasive fish incursions poses a significant challenge because of the wide physiological tolerances of many species, their mobility, and the role of humans in their spread. In New Zealand, seven introduced fish species are distributed to varying extents across the two main islands. We used field data from 470 New Zealand lakes to fit models of the current distributions of these species; the resulting models were then used to predict risks of future establishment in all New Zealand lakes >1 ha. Models using lake- and catchment-scale environmental predictors identified summer temperature amongst the two most influential variables with lake density and size also important for some species. Models for some species were improved by the addition of variables describing human population densities and lake accessibility. All seven species occurred most frequently in lakes close to human population centres implicating the importance of human-mediated dispersal. Addition of a spatial variable, indicating the presence or absence of the modelled species within the broader catchment within which each lake is located, improved the predictive performance of models for three species. This indicates that the current distributions of these species include clusters of lakes within ‘occupied’ catchments, resulting in geographic patchiness that is independent of the available environmental and human population predictors. This distribution has most likely resulted from spread into accessible and suitable lakes from one or more initial liberations, either by natural dispersal along waterways or human-assistance. Predictions to a broader set of 3595 New Zealand lakes indicate (i) the potential for future spread is greatest for catfish, perch and rudd, and (ii) high vulnerability to invasion for lakes along the east coast of both islands and in inland montane regions of the South Island. Our results allow for improved identification of lakes likely to be suitable for invasive fish species which should be accorded priority for surveillance, and highlight in particular the potential for perch and catfish to establish in higher elevation lakes distant from human population centres. 180 Characterisation and aetiology of Jelly-like gonad condition (JGC) in the common carp, Cyprinus carpio (L) Raihan Mahmud1, John Purser2, Jawahar G Patil1, 3 1. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, IMAS–Taroona, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 2. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, IMAS–Launceston, Launceston, Tasmania, Australia 3. Inland Fisheries Service Tasmania, New Norfolk, Tasmania, Australia Occurrence of gonad abnormalities in wild caught fish although rare have been reported in multiple species. Presented here is a jelly-like testis condition routinely encountered from wild caught carp in Tasmania. To delineate the cause/s of the condition, the prevalence, onset and progression was examined and correlated with select biotic and abiotic factors in a single cohort of wild carp over four breeding seasons. Observations this far indicate that the prevalence increased (0 to 17.3% of the male cohort) over four consecutive breeding seasons with progressive severity which could be sub-categorised as low, mild, severe and complete. Statistical analysis revealed a significant positive relationship of the condition to fork-length and body weight, with no significant influence from the abiotic factors tested. Growth of the affected fish was on average 9.22, 12.39, 14.24 and 19.78 % higher than that of female, pooled, male and immature sub-populations. Histopathological examination indicates absence of bacteria, fungal hyphae or viral inclusion bodies. Instead the testes were characterised by enhanced proliferation of sertoli cells in the initial stages followed by substantial apoptosis in the later stages leading to formation of fluid filled lumen that impart the jelly-like appearance. Parallel examinations in the golden galaxiid and brown trout that inhabit the same lacustrine system indicate that the condition is absent in both species. Elucidating the causes and mechanisms underpinning such naturally occurring abnormalities could assist in developing powerful pest fish control methods that disrupt reproductive capability of the target species in a species specific manner. 181 The eradication and management of European carp from two large freshwater lakes in Tasmania Chris Boon1 1. Inland Fisheries Service, New Norfolk, TAS, Australia Previously deemed absent from Tasmania, European carp (Cyprinus carpio) were first discovered in Lakes Crescent and Sorell in January 1995. As a result, the Carp Management Program was established to contain, control, and ultimately eradicate carp from the lakes. Through the development of various techniques over 12 years (1995-2007), a complete eradication of carp from Lake Crescent was achieved using an integrated approach. By using these strategies in Lake Sorell, the carp population was estimated to have been reduced to less than 50 fish by 2009. However, a spawning event which occurred in spring that year resulted in the introduction of approximately 50 000 carp. The techniques used to target these fish varied with life stage. Juvenile carp were initially targeted using rotenone poison, as they were concentrated in marsh environments. As they developed further, intensive netting, electro-fishing, barriers, and traps were used to target these fish as they became more mobile. Biotelemetry techniques were also used to gather knowledge of seasonable habitat preference. A significant increase in netting effort has been implemented in response to declining catch rates as the carp population is continually depleted. Alongside intensive netting, radio transmitter implanted carp will be utilised in order to prevent spawning and to remove the remaining individuals from the lake. The most current population estimate calculated in March 2016 suggests that there are now less than 1200 fish remaining, with over 95% of the original population removed. 182 Assessing maturity of Common Carp (Cyprinus carpio) in Lake Sorell to determine spawning capability and susceptibility to varied fishing techniques. Christopher D Bowen1 1. Inland Fisheries Service, New Norfolk, Tasmania, Australia This study looks at the progression of maturity of a single cohort of carp in Lake Sorell Tasmania. The ability of these fish to reproduce is an important consideration for the Carp Management Program (CMP) with the goal of eradication of this contained population. All fish captured are assessed on maturity with macroscopic gonad staging. The most undeveloped gonads were classified stage one through to the most developed being stage four. Fish of the same age have shown considerable difference in the development of the gonads with only 2.22% stage four running males and 0.42% stage four running females in the 2015/2016 season. The 2015/16 season represents carp in their sixth year of growth. Historically, females in Lake Sorell reached stage four at a minimum fork length of 353mm. Seventy five percent of stage three females are less than 350mm as of the 2015/16 season. It is this limited number of large fish that is restricting maturation in Lake Sorell. Low water temperatures along with selecting for fast growing fish using larger mesh gill net throughout the CMP has limited the numbers of fish capable of maturing to stage four. The small percentage (estimated <3%) of remaining carp are also the slowest growers of the cohort. This has created a population with limited numbers of mature carp. It assists with reducing spawning risk though makes targeted fishing using spawning aggregations difficult. 183 The shift in behaviour of European carp in Lake Sorell, Tasmania Jonah L Yick1 1. Inland Fisheries Service, New Norfolk, TAS, Australia Since the discovery of European carp (Cyprinus carpio) in Lakes Crescent and Sorell in 1995, intense, physical removal techniques were implemented. As a result, carp were successfully eradicated from Lake Crescent, while approximately 3% of the carp population in Lake Sorell remains. A key factor to the success of both lakes has been the use of radio transmitter implanted carp; “Judas fish”. This technique was first incorporated into the Carp Management Program (CMP) in 1997, where mature male carp were initially used as the hosts for transmitters. The data collected gave the CMP an insight into seasonal habitat preference, which resulted in the detection of spawning aggregations. Aggregations were targeted using an integrated approach, with the combined use of gill nets and electrofishing. After almost eradicating carp (<50) from Lake Sorell, a spawning event occurred in 2009 leading to the unfortunate recruitment of approximately 50 000 carp. Consequently, juvenile carp were implanted with radio-transmitters to detect any aggregations, which were mainly associated with feeding. These juvenile 1 to 2 year old carp were found to frequent warm shallows, and were thus vulnerable to effective targeting. However once reaching 3 years of age, they moved out into deeper water. The maturity of these fish was slower than any other cohort of fish observed since the start of the CMP. Thus over the next few years, the delayed maturity resulted in the carp avoiding the shallows for the majority of time, and subsequently led to significantly lower catch per unit effort (CPUE) due to fewer opportunities to target aggregations. If these fish reach maturity this coming season in conjunction with ideal environmental cues (rising lake levels and warm settled weather in spring), it is likely that they will push back inshore and become susceptible to targeted effort. 184 Sustained Exclusion of Koi Carp (Cyprinus carpio) from Lake Ohinewai, New Zealand Grant Tempero1, Nicholas Ling1, Adam Daniel2, Dai Morgan3 1. University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand 2. Fish and Game New Zealand, Hamilton, New Zealand 3. North Tec, Whangarei, New Zealand Lake Ohinewai is a shallow (4.5 m depth), 16 ha lake in the Waikato region on the North Island of New Zealand that has experienced eutrophication and total loss of submerged aquatic macrophytes since 1983. Invasive fish species such as koi carp (Cyprinus carpio) have been identified as contributing to ecosystem degradation and loss of biodiversity in many North Island lakes. Effective tools for control of invasive fish species has become a priority for governmental agencies. Telemetry tracking of koi carp in the Waikato region has suggested that up to 75% of koi carp undertake migratory movements at some point in their life history. In order to exploit this behaviour, a permanent one-way barrier based on the SARDI push trap was installed on the single outlet to Lake Ohinewai. The barrier was designed to allow passage of adult fish from the lake while preventing their return. When coupled with biomass removals this resulted in a reduction in koi carp biomass from 373 (234 – 513 95% CI) kg/ha in March 2011 to 36.1 (15.3 – 56.9 95% CI) kg/ha in December 2011, 42% of this reduction could be attributed to emigration by adult koi carp. Further surveys in 2013 and 2014 found continued reductions in the koi carp population to 10.4 (3.1 – 17.7 95% CI) kg/ha in December 2014. Analysis of length frequency data showed no significant shifts in koi carp population structure or changes in abundance of other invasive species such as goldfish (Carassius auratus) and brown bullhead catfish (Ameiurus nebulosus) in 2014. Water quality (Secchi disk transparency and total suspended solids) of Lake Ohinewai showed early signs of improvement but submerged macrophytes have not yet recovered. Further surveys will be conducted during the coming 201617 summer to determine if changes in population structure or abundance of invasive species has altered since the previous survey in 2014. 185 Application of an acoustic positioning array to investigate 3-dimensional habitat utilisation by an air breathing fish (Neoceratodus forsteri) in a seasonally stratified riverine impoundment. David T Roberts1, Vinay Udyawer2, Craig Franklin3, Ross Dwyer3, Hamish Campbell4 1. Seqwater, Ipswich, Qld, Australia 2. James Cook University, Townsville, Qld, Australia 3. University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia 4. School for the Environment, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Ql, Australia Facultative air-breathing fish can survive extended periods in hypoxic water due to their capacity for aerial respiration. The majority of studies on air breathing fish response to hypoxia have been experimental under forced hypoxia. How air-breathing fish respond to hypoxic conditions in-situ has received little attention. Using high frequency acoustic tracking of the facultative air-breathing Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, we investigated how lungfish respond to hypoxic zones and periods of holomixus. Lungfish were tracked within a river impoundment using depth sensitive transmitters and 26 acoustic receivers, to locate fish positions in 3-dimensions. Three-dimensional kernel utilisation distribution models (3D-KUD) were developed to investigate lungfish space utilisation in the presence and absence of an oxycline. During stratified conditions, lungfish maintained a 3D-KUD above the oxycline, rarely venturing into hypoxic waters. During holomixis, lungfish 3D-KUD expanded to utilising a wider range of depths. Despite N. forsteri having physiological adaptations to cope with anoxic conditions, the presence of hypoxic zones and the species narrow depth preferences, reduced the total space utilised to < 8 % of the study area substratum. With increasing demand for new impoundments in many tropical regions, our study provides insight into how airbreathing fish species might respond to altered environmental conditions. 186 Understanding eel behaviour to aid the development of downstream migration options for short-finned eels David N Ikedife1 1. Hydro Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia There is a significant body of evidence that global stocks of freshwater eel (family Anguillidae) are in decline. Of the 22 known species or subspecies of freshwater eel, eight have been listed as threatened or near threatened on the IUCN Redlist. It is likely that the often arduous catadromous migration requirement of anguillid eels contributes to the vulnerability of this family to anthropogenic disturbances. Short-finned eels (Anguilla australis) are an important component of Tasmania’s freshwater fish fauna. While they are adept at negotiating a wide range of natural barriers, large dams and weirs impact upon both upstream and downstream migration. Trevallyn dam is located in the downstream reaches of Tasmania’s largest water catchment, and blocks the migratory path of eels between the Tamar estuary and the South Esk River. The dam spills infrequently and downstream migrating eels have little option but to pass through Trevallyn power station to reach the estuary. Hydro Tasmania deployed an adaptive resolution imaging sonar (ARIS) on the intake of Trevallyn power station and implanted migrating eels with Juvenile Salmon Acoustic Telemetry System (JSATS) tags to obtain information on migrating eel behaviour around the dam, power station intake, and tailrace. The study showed a high level of eel activity around the intake during the migration season, the majority of this activity was nocturnal, migration peaks were related to catchment hydrology, and the majority of tagged eels eventually passed through the power station. The study showed that there is significant potential to facilitate downstream migration at Trevallyn, as eels showed aversion to entering the power station intake, and did not necessarily enter it upon their initial encounter. Hydro Tasmania is currently designing a downstream bypass system to safely pass eels downstream by capitalising on the results of the migration study. 187 Will they stay or will they go? The occupancy and population dynamics of Murray cod in a cold-water impacted River Zeb Tonkin1, John Koehn1, Jarod Lyon1, Graeme Hackett1, Justin O'Mahony1, Sarah Commens2 1. Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, Arthur Rylah Institute, Heidelberg, Victoria 2. River Management, Murray Darling Basin Authority, Canberra The construction of large water storages and subsequent alteration of flow regimes and thermal pollution have had devastating impacts on native freshwater fish populations globally. Native fish populations in the lower reaches of the Mitta Mitta River have declined substantially since the construction (in the 1970’s) and operation of Dartmouth Dam. Self-sustaining populations of Trout cod and Murray cod were reported to have substantially declined or become locally extinct in the river by the early 1990’s, attributed largely to the largely annual release of cold water during spring and summer. In more recent times, recreational fishing reports and fish surveys have detected Murray cod again occupying this reach of river. This prompted managers to reconsider the general view that the reach is unsuitable for native fish populations. Here we present outcomes of a research project aimed at improving the knowledge of the Murray cod population in the lower Mitta Mitta River with the aim of guiding improved river operations and management. We investigate patterns of population structure and hydrological records to generate a conceptual understanding of the role of water operations in influencing the current occupancy of Murray cod in the Mitta Mitta River and any interactions that may occur with Lake Hume downstream. We also present the preliminary results of an acoustic telemetry program aimed at testing our hypotheses that the altered flow and temperature regimes in the Mitta Mitta River may be influencing migratory patterns of the species. 188 Did the fish cross the road, and if so, why? John R Morrongiello1, David D Crook2, Wayne M Koster3, Robin Hale1 1. University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia 2. Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT 3. Arthur Rylah Institute, Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, Heidelberg, VIC The advent of modern telemetry methods have resulted in a vast increase in the volume of movement data being collected. What do we do with all this data, and how can we use it to answer actual questions of ecological and evolutionary interest? I argue that some studies still just ask the question: ‘did the fish cross the road?’ when in actual fact the key question is ‘why did the fish cross the road?’. The application of not-too-complex analytical techniques to telemetry data can greatly increase our understanding of the drivers and relevance of fish movement. Here, I present a series of mixed models, illustrated with examples, to show how greater biological insight can be garnered from the vast data archives at hand. These include analysis of time-to-event data, binary and continuous movement data, and cyclical environmental predictors. I will then discuss the importance of animal personality, its relevance to animal movement, and introduce models that allow for the quantification of this phenotypic diversity. Properly harnessing the potential of data collected in telemetry studies will greatly increase our ecological and evolutionary understanding of the causes and consequences of animal movement. 189 More sharks in the north: Shark diversity and abundance along the Great Barrier Reef Leanne M Currey2, 1, Michelle R Heupel2, 1 1. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia Elasmobranchs inhabiting coral reef environments experience a number of environmental and anthropogenic threats. Yet, how species-specific distributions and habitat associations are driven by geographical and environmental factors is not well understood. Baited Remote Underwater Video Systems (BRUVS) are a non-extractive and non-destructive technique used by the Global FinPrint Project to assess relative abundance and diversity of sharks and rays worldwide. Existing BRUVS data 1 collected along the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) revealed that shark abundance and species richness were most influenced by relative distance along and across the reef shelf and hard coral cover. Evidence suggests shark occurrence and species richness was higher in the Northern and Southern regions of the GBR compared to the Central GBR, while non-fished reefs supported higher shark abundance. While this dataset spanned the GBR, fewer deployments were conducted in the North (11-15°S), which is more remote, sustains comparably less fishing pressure and has been relatively unstudied. Recent FinPrint BRUVS sampling focused on 2 locations (4 reefs, n = 154) in this region to specifically investigate shark and ray occurrence. Elasmobranchs were observed on 85% of deployments and 14 species of sharks and 7 species of rays were identified, with 3 additional species not observed in the previous study. The most abundant species observed were grey reefC. amblyrhynchos, blacktip reef C. melanopterus, whitetip reef T. obesus, lemon N. acutidens and tiger G. cuvier sharks. Patterns in relative abundance and species richness will be revealed with comparisons among locations, no-take and fished reefs, water temperature, depth, reef orientation, benthos, and distance along and across the shelf. This research highlights the exceptional diversity and abundance of species in remote areas of the GBR, and contributes to our understanding of their distribution patterns and marine reserve use, which is essential for effective shark conservation. 1. Espinoza M, Cappo M, Heupel M, Tobin A, Simpfendorfer C (2014). Quantifying Shark Distribution Patterns and SpeciesHabitat Associations: Implications of Marine Park Zoning, PLOS One 9: e106885. 190 Opening the floodgates to fish and prawn recovery in a temperate coastal wetland. Craig A Boys1, Bruce Pease2 1. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Taylors Beach, NSW, Australia 2. Consultant, Sydney, NSW, Australia Tidally-active wetlands are important nursery grounds for juvenile fish and decapod crustacean species, but urban development has significantly reduced their availability. Structural flood mitigation works, such as installing culverts and floodgates, have been responsible for a lot of this decline. These works fragment habitat, restrict tidal flushing and degrade nursery habitat of estuarine fish and decapod crustaceans (collectively referred to as nekton). Such losses cannot occur without associated losses in the productivity of fisheries. The findings of the current study provide evidence that at least some of these declines may be reversible if rehabilitation projects are adaptively managed over sufficiently long time periods. The incremental opening of eight floodgates at Hexham Swamp adjacent to the Hunter River in New South Wales, afforded the rare opportunity to monitor water quality and nekton assemblages in a tidal creek over an extensive (eleven year) period encompassing pre-floodgate opening, the opening of one gate, three gates and finally all eight gates. Floodgate opening enhanced both water quality and nektonic assemblages relative to a control creek whose barrier remained in place. However, recovery to a state similar to unrestricted reference creeks was not immediate and did not occur until after all eight gates were opened. This case study serves to stress the importance of reinstating tidal flushing to nursery habitats in order to enhance populations of economically valuable coastal fish and decapod species, and moreover, that increasing levels of tidal flushing may need to be incrementally applied in some systems before a threshold response in recovery is achieved. 191 Native fish use of engineered habitats Matthew Beitzel1, Lisa Evans1, Mark Jekabsons1, Travis Howson2 1. ACT Government, Canberra, ACT, Australia 2. Australian Private Fisheries Resources, St Marys, South Australia Two recent projects have been implemented to trial improvements to fish habitat in ACT rivers. Each project tackles different environmental problems and conditions. The first was using concrete reef balls tm and ‘Cod Caves’ to provide habitat in a reach highly constrained by anthropogenic influences on the Molonglo River. The second was Engineered Log Jams (ELJs) to create habitat and mitigate the impacts of a sand slug in a section of the Murrumbidgee River. The aim of both projects was to improve habitat for native fish in the reach particularly large bodied native fish. The reaches that had Cod Caves were compared with nearby reaches congested with willows and reaches cleared of willows and flood debris. Monitoring of the Cod Caves over four years found significantly fewer carp in the improved reaches than either the uncleared or cleared reaches, and that both Golden Perch and Murray Cod were more common in the improved reaches. Monitoring of the ELJs has found high numbers of Murray Cod juveniles and adults in the immediate vicinity of the structures compared to other habitats available nearby. Results suggest that when applied to relevant riverine conditions the habitat improvement techniques trialled were highly successful at improving conditions for native fish. 192 Fish community condition in the Koondrook-Perricoota Forest, a large lowland river floodplain forest. David Hohnberg1, Meaghan Duncan2, Peter Graham2, Martin Asmus2, Wayne Robinson3 1. NSW Department of Industry, DPI Fisheries, Port Stephens Fisheries Institute, Taylors Beach, NSW, Australia 2. NSW Department of Industry, DPI Fisheries, Narrandera Fisheries Centre, Narrandera, NSW, Australia 3. Charles Sturt University, Albury, NSW, Australia The Koondrook-Perricoota Forest (KPF) is a large floodplain forest with wetland and creek ecosystems adjacent to the River Murray in southern New South Wales and is one of The Living Murray (TLM) icon sites. The objective for fish at KPF is to protect and enhance viable native fish communities including improved recruitment. To determine progress toward the objectives, the KPF Fish Condition Monitoring project was established in 2011 after drought-breaking floods in 2010. The KPF Fish Condition Monitoring project has two major monitoring objectives: annual assessment of the condition of the KPF fish community; and assessment of change in the condition over time. The sampling methods and analysis approach follow the Sustainable Rivers Audit with specific adaptation for small-bodied species to improve suitability to KPF. This presentation summarises the results of the KPF condition monitoring and the changes in the fish community since 2011. The main findings include: exotic fish species (goldfish and common carp) dominated the fish community with native fish biomass averaging only 17% of total fish biomass. Only 30% of native fish species on the historical species list for KPF were recorded. A relatively high abundance of native species (carp gudgeon and Australian smelt), but low native biomass, highlights the prominence of small-bodied native species and an almost total absence of large-bodied natives. Four small bodied native fish species had recruits present, however there were fewer recruits than in previous years. One observed improvement in 2015 was the collection for the second year of dwarf flathead gudgeon, a cryptic species that is very patchily distributed, having only been recorded in a few locations in Australia. To improve the fish community in the KPF the objectives for native fish must be an ongoing priority in the development of the water management regime for the forest. 193 Stairway to heaven or highway to hell: the pathway to recovering threatened freshwater fish in Australia. Mark Lintermans1 1. University of Canberra, CANBERRA, ACT, Australia Globally, freshwater fish are going down the tubes as competition for water use intensifies (domestic, industrial, agricultural, environmental). It has recently been identified that there are at least 3,700 additional large hydropower dam planned or under construction worldwide, and in 2013 in Australia the Abbot Federal Government came to power with an election promise of the construction of an additional 100 large dams. There are currently 37 freshwater fish species listed as threatened under the EPBC Act, but 60 are listed by ASFB, a sign of the trend of future EPBC listings . As new species are described, many go straight onto threatened species lists (e.g. 9 of 14 recently described Galaxias spp.). What does the recent Commonwealth Threatened Species Strategy mean for freshwater fish? Is the newly appointed Threatened Species Commissioner interested in fish? How are Australia’s threatened freshwater fish faring, and what is their prognosis for the future? This presentation outlines the history of threatened fish declarations in Australia, what we are doing to recover them, and what we need to do better. 194 Genetic structure and effective population size of the river blackfish in their most northern catchment suggests their longterm population viability is threatened Stephen Balcombe1, Joel Huey2, 3, 4, 1, Kathryn Real1, David Sternberg1, 5, Jane Hughes1 1. Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, Nathan, Qld, Australia 2. Department of Terrestrial Zoology, Western Australian Museum, Welshpool, Western Australia, Australia 3. School of Animal Biology, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia 4. School of Natural Sciences , Edith Cowan University, Joondalup , Western Australia, Australia 5. Water Services Group, Central Region, Department of Natural Resources and Mines, Mackay, Qld, Australia Fish populations in upland freshwater streams tend to be highly susceptible to anthropogenic impacts such as land degradation and their isolation from other potentially suitable habitats, combined with the fragmented, dendritic structure of headwaters renders their dispersal to more suitable habitats an unlikely response to recover from such impacts. The most northern population of river blackfish (Gadopsis marmoratus) is isolated to a tiny area in the headwaters of the Condamine River in the northern Murray Darling Basin. Local knowledge reveals they were once widespread and abundant in all headwaters, and relatively common in lowland reaches. Their massive range contraction coincided with widespread land-clearing in the catchment for agriculture leading to highly degraded riparian and in-stream habitat. To gain an understanding of the remnant population of this fish we sampled them across 15 sites for an understanding of their current range then undertook an analysis of their genetic structure and variation across the sampling area. Strong genetic structure was detected among subpopulations, using microsatellites (0.173, p<0.0001) and mtDNA (0.369, p<0.05). Effective population size was low, ranging between 18.8 and 48.2, depending on the estimation method used. Bayesian clustering revealed three clusters, however these were not congruent with drainage patterns, suggesting a complex history of dispersal among headwaters that are isolated by waterfalls. Overall, these results suggest that G. marmoratus is unlikely to disperse into new habitats if their remaining habitat become unsuitable. Low effective population size and genetic diversity also suggests that local adaptation to future impacts such as altered temperature regimes under climate change is unlikely. It is likely that significant investment in restoration of the degraded lands will be required to ensure the persistence of river blackfish in the Condamine River catchment. 195 Emergency efforts to conserve Running River Rainbowfish from extinction Peter Unmack1, Michael Hammer2, Steve Brooks3, Keith Martin, Steve Hume3, Jason Schaffer4, Damien Burrows4, Luciano Beheregaray5, Catherine Attard5, Jonathan Sandoval-Castillo5, Gerald Allen6, Culum Brown7, Mark Lintermans1 1. Institute for Applied Ecology, University of Canberra, Canberra, ACT, Australia 2. Curator of Fishes, Museum & Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin, NT, Australia 3. Qld Fisheries, Brisbane, Qld 4. TropWATER, James Cook Uni, Townsville, Qld, Australia 5. Flinders University, Adelaide, SA 6. WA Museum, Perth, WA 7. Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW With golden to green bodies, bright red fins and distinctive black zig-zag lines on their flanks, aquarists have long recognized the rainbowfish from Running River in the Burdekin catchment of northern Queensland as unique. As part of our groups research into this and other enigmatic rainbowfish populations PU and MH discovered that another rainbowfish had been introduced upstream of where the native Running River Rainbowfish lives and was invading downstream! This would almost certainly result in extinction of this population through hybridisation. Live fish were brought into captivity for conservation purposes while we conducted detailed genetic work on various rainbowfish populations from northern Queensland. This work demonstrated that Running River Rainbowfish is different and efforts to compare these populations morphologically are moving forward with MH and GA. PU established a crowd funding effort in conjunction with the Australia New Guinea Fishes Association to raise money for genetic testing of wild fish to ensure that all broodstock were pure fish. With help from LB, CA and JS breeders were matched to maximise genetic variability. Fish are being bred at University of Canberra, then shipped up to JS and DB at James Cook University to be grown out prior to release in spring 2016. PU, ML and JS conducted additional fieldwork to examine two tributaries to Running River which had the best potential as translocation sites and to bring back additional wild fish. Rainbowfish were not present in either creek and large waterfalls are present which would keep these populations isolated from the introduced rainbowfish. This talk provides an overview of the efforts so far to save the Running River Rainbowfish and to inform ASFB members of where this collaborative conservation effort is heading next. 196 Are specific populations of key threatened MDB fishes native or introduced? Peter Unmack1, Mark Adams2, Dean Gilligan3 1. University of Canberra, Canberra, ACT, Australia 2. Evolutionary Biology Unit, South Australian Museum, Adelaide, SA, USA 3. NSW DPI Fisheries, Batemans Bay, NSW Many Murray-Darling Basin (MDB) freshwater fishes have experienced extreme declines, with around a quarter of the freshwater fishes threatened with extinction. Here we target three native fishes that were once widespread across the MDB, but today have all had significant declines (Purple Spotted Gudgeon, Olive Perchlet and Darling Hardyhead). Remnant populations are extremely geographically limited, with some recently discovered populations occurring outside of the perceived natural range of the species. Existing genetic data have been unable to clarify whether these populations are endemic or translocated. Recovery actions for remnant populations are consequently very difficult to prioritise. We are now applying genetic data from thousands of loci from next generation double digest RAD sequencing, coupled with comprehensive sampling from all potential source populations. Together this should unequivocally distinguish the native status of each population. It will also provide key information regarding each populations genetic diversity, divergence between populations and whether any loci appear to be related to potential local adaptations. These results can then be used to guide reintroduction efforts and conservation strategies. 197 Trojan Y genetic control of the invasive fish Gambusia holbrooki: rationale, progress, challenges and management realities. Jawahar G Patil2, 1, Peter Cui1, Lokman Norazmi3, John Diggle2, Frank Grutzner4, John Purser3 1. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, IMAS–Taroona, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 2. Inland Fisheries Service Tasmania, New Norfolk, Tasmania, Australia 3. Fisheries and Aquaculture Centre, IMAS–Launceston, Launceston, Tasmania, Australia 4. Environment Institute, School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia The history of trying to deal with destructive pest-fish species on large spatial scales has to date been ineffective with the problem likely to grow more severe around the world in the future. Genetic approaches could revolutionize the management of such pests but are subject to a range of technical, behavioural and ecological limitations and may face the challenge of public acceptability. Our work on Gambusia holbrooki a pest fish of concern to Australia, takes a systematic approach of evaluating feasibility, assessing public acceptance and making technical advances on Trojan Y as a suitable genetic control option. Using a prototype generic model that incorporates both genetic and population dynamic determinants for the control of gonochoristic, bisexual vertebrate pests we show that the Trojan Y is not only the most effective—about 10 and 20 times more effective compared to a closest gender distorting recombinant approach in terms of time to eradication and cost for total eradication respectively—but also one that remains environmentally benign and socially more acceptable. Evaluation of behavioural tradeoffs, parametrisation of a model that is specific to a field site in Tasmania, design of a management strategy for evaluation, and generation of population and genetic tools for assessing the progress of introgression and eradication are underway and will be discussed. 198 Understanding and managing Common Carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) in the Glenelg River, Victoria, Australia. Leigh Thwaites1, Josh Fredberg1, Stephen Ryan2 1. SARDI Aquatic Sciences, Henley Beach, SA, Australia 2. Glenelg Hopkins Catchment Management Authority, Hamilton, Victoria, Australia Common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) are a relatively recent invader of the Glenelg River system (circa 2001). The Glenelg Hopkins Catchment Management Authority (CMA) is currently developing a strategy to slow their spread through the system and manage sites where carp are present to reduce their impact on native fish and overall river health. Key to the development of a cost effective carp control strategy is knowledge of the movement patterns and habitat preferences of carp which may be exploited for control purposes, as well as an understanding of the carp population dynamics and the efficiency of potential carp control techniques within targeted systems. This talk will present the results of a four year study that: 1) utilised acoustic telemetry and geospatial modelling to investigate carp movement patterns, 2) investigated the influence of environmental factors (i.e. temperature and flow) on movement, 3) evaluated feasible options for harvesting carp within the Glenelg River, 4) estimated the total numbers and density of carp within the system and, 5) integrated these data and provided strategies for a cost effective carp control program for the Glenelg River. 199 Response of size and abundance of redfin perch to successive removals Brendan J Hicks1, Nicholas Ling1, Ian Duggan1, Susie Wood2, Stephane Gauthier3 1. School of Science, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand 2. Cawthron Institute, Nelson, New Zealand 3. Institute of Ocean Sciences, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Sidney, British Columbia, Canada The 2.3-ha lower Karori Reservoir is a warm, monomictic lake with a mean depth of 8.2 m, a maximum depth of over 20 m. Its 252-ha catchment consists of mixed regenerating shrub-hardwood forest The lake is formed by an earth dam that as completed in 1874 to provide a water supply for the city of Wellington, New Zealand. Redfin perch (Perca fluviatilis) were introduced into the reservoir in 1878 and have formed a more or less monospecific population ever since. The lower reservoir ceased to function as a water supply in 1992. When this happened, water through-flow also ceased and the water retention time increased from 5 days to about 300 days. As a consequence, the reservoir has been dominated by blooms of cyanobacteria. We speculated that the trophic cascade induced by juvenile perch predation on zooplankton was exacerbating the cyanobacterial blooms so we set about reducing the perch abundance by fishing over 5 successive years to test this hypothesis. The response of age-0 perch (N caught = 690) to the first year (2007) of removal of all sizes of perch was a 3-fold increase in age0 abundance (N caught = 2,071) and an increase of 21 mm in age-0 mean fork length in 2008 (67.5 mm) compared to the original mean in 2007 (46.8 mm). Perch removal in 2008 increased the number of age-0 perch in 2009 to 6 times the original abundance (N caught = 4,281) and the mean fork length a further 3 mm to 70.9 mm. A hydro-acoustic survey before and after perch removal in 2009 suggested that 54% of the perch population was removed. No fishing occurred in 2010, but further fishing in 2011 revealed that the number of age-0 perch had returned to close to the pre-fishing abundance (N caught = 885). The mean fork length of age-0 perch, however, was 67.6 mm, still 21 mm greater than the original mean length in 2007. Our results suggest that partial removal of perch is unlikely to achieve the desired top-down restoration of a healthy zooplankton population capable of controlling algal blooms. 200 Alien fish response to enlargement of a temperate reservoir Ben Broadhurst1, Mark Lintermans1, Rhian Clear1, Chris Fulton2 1. Institute for Applied Ecology, University of Canberra, Canberra 2. Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra The millennium drought strained water resources in south-eastern Australia. To increase domestic water security in the Australian Capital Territory, Cotter Dam was enlarged 20-fold. Alien fish populations in the Cotter Reservoir were monitored before and during filling, largely to determine if changes in their population size and structure due to reservoir enlargement had resulted in detrimental impacts on populations of threatened Macquarie perch and two-spined blackfish. Since filling, populations of goldfish have increased, likely in response to a surge in available resources as the reservoir fills. The increase in goldfish is likely to be a driver in the establishment of a breeding colony of cormorants (never before observed in the Cotter Catchment). Size and abundance of rainbow trout has not changed since filling began, though there has been a marked increase in brown trout abundance. This is of some concern as a steep increase in an apex predator such as brown trout could increase trout predation upon the Macquarie perch population. Eastern gambusia and oriental weatherloach remain rare captures with current capture techniques; however, ad hoc observations of both of these species suggest they are common throughout the reservoir. Since filling began in 2013, there has not been any link between alien fish population change due to reservoir filling and increase in detrimental impacts to threatened fish populations in the Cotter catchment. 201 Prey density threshold and tidal influence on reef manta ray foraging at an aggregation site on the Great Barrier Reef Asia O Armstrong Large tropical and sub-tropical marine animals must meet their energetic requirements in a largely oligotrophic environment. Many planktivorous elasmobranchs, whose thermal ecologies prevent foraging in nutrient-rich polar waters, aggregate seasonally at predictable locations throughout tropical oceans where they are observed feeding. Here we investigate the foraging and oceanographic environment around Lady Elliot Island, a known aggregation site for reef manta rays Manta alfredi in the southern Great Barrier Reef. The foraging behaviour of reef manta rays was analysed in relation to zooplankton populations and local oceanography, and compared to long-term sighting records of reef manta rays from the dive operator on the island. Reef manta rays fed at Lady Elliot Island when zooplankton biomass and abundance were significantly higher than other times. The critical prey density threshold that triggered feeding was 11.2 mg m-3 while zooplankton size had no significant effect on feeding. The community composition and size structure of the zooplankton remained relatively unchanged irrespective of reef manta ray behaviour. Higher zooplankton biomass was observed prior to low tide, and long-term sighting data confirmed that more reef manta rays are also observed feeding during this tidal phase than other times. This is the first study to examine prey availability at an aggregation site for reef manta rays and it indicates that they feed in locations and at times of higher zooplankton biomass. 1. Armstrong AO, Armstrong AJ, Jaine FRA, Couturier LIE, Fiora K, Uribe-Palomino J, Weeks SJ, Townsend KA, Bennett MB and Richardson AJ. Prey Density Threshold and Tidal Influence on Reef Manta Ray Foraging at an Aggregation Site on the Great Barrier Reef. PLoS one. 2016; 11(5): e0153393. 202 Ecology of marine cleaning stations used by Manta alfredi in Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia Hannah Ashe1, Mike van Keulen1, 2, Frazer McGregor2 1. Murdoch University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia 2. Coral Bay Research Station, Coral Bay, Western Australia, Australia Marine cleaning stations are important habitats for a vast array of species. Specialized cleaners provide an essential service, feeding on ectoparasites, dead tissue, mucus or scales from visiting clients. Cleaning stations are common aggregation sites for Manta alfredi and often relied upon for both scientific research and the ecotourism industry. Studies of movement patterns of Manta alfredi within Ningaloo Marine Park have shown seasonal patterns in the use of particular cleaning stations. GoPro cameras were deployed to study the ecology of three key cleaning stations in Bateman Bay, Ningaloo Reef, during periods of low manta visitations; the cameras were used to monitor what species visited the cleaning stations over a period of four months. Although species composition varied between cleaning stations, similarities were also observed. Each cleaning station had visitations from assorted clientele which provided a food source for the cleaners; M. alfredi were also seen visiting the cleaning stations in their ‘off-season’, but infrequently. By improving our understanding of these key habitats that are repeatedly used by M. alfredi, we can better protect these habitats and therefore this iconic species. 203 Physiological and ecological responses of an estuarine fish to fluctuating temperature and oxygen concentration Nathan Beerkens1, Adrian Gleiss1, Stephen Beatty1, Jake Watsham1, Timothy Clark2, Steeg Hoeksma3, Alex Hams3, Gavin Partridge4 1. Freshwater Fish Group and Fish Health Unit, Murdoch University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia 2. University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 3. Department of Parks and Wildlife, Perth, Western Australia, Australia 4. Australian Centre for Applied Aquaculture Research, South Metropolitan TAFE, Fremantle, Western Australia, Australia Understanding how environmental conditions mediate the performance of individuals represents an important step towards predicting how environmental perturbations may impact populations. Rainfall reductions, along with increased development, are changing environmental conditions in south-west Australia’s iconic Swan-Canning Estuary. Of particular concern are protracted periods of hypoxia that may impact recreational and commercial fish stocks. Here, we quantified the metabolic physiology, via respirometry, and the voluntary activity, via animal-attached accelerometers, of Black Bream (Acanthopagrus butcheri), a southern Australian estuarine specialist, across a range of ecologically-relevant temperatures and dissolved-oxygen saturations. Our results show that Black Bream display temperature-dependent metabolic physiology, sensitive to changes in oxygen saturation, that translate into changes in voluntary activity under field conditions. Overall, our data will be useful in quantifying how past and future changes in environmental conditions impact this iconic estuarine species. 204 Climate-driven range shifts in fishes and the impacts on temperate marine ecosystems Curtis Champion1, Sean Tracey1, Gretta Pecl1, Alistair Hobday2 1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Hobart 2. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Hobart The redistribution of fish in the ocean has emerged as one of the most significant biological impacts of anthropogenic climate change on the marine environment. These 'range shifts' are already affecting the structure and function of established ecosystems and fisheries, with further changes likely as ocean warming continues. This research is addressing how and why different marine fishes shift their distributions in response to climate change, and what the ecological impacts are. Two iconic species, the yellowtail kingfish Seriola lalandi and the pink snapper Chrysophrys auratus, are being studied within the context of a prominent marine warming hotspot that is located off south-east Australia, where ocean warming is occurring at a rate approximately four times the global average. Both of these species from south-east Australia are thought to be extending their ranges poleward and are likely becoming important components of Tasmanian marine ecosystems. This study aims to: 1) quantify changes in the distributions of yellowtail kingfish and pink snapper from south-east Australia, 2) assess the connectivity of fish found in Tasmania with populations from south-east Australia, 3) compare the condition of fish found in Tasmania with those from populations from lower latitudes, and 4) assess the trophic interactions of these species within Tasmanian ecosystems through stomach content analyses. Data to achieve aim 1 will be extracted from the full complement of available sources, including Reef Life Survey, Atlas of Living Australia, Redmap, recreational game fish tagging surveys and commercial fisheries catch records, and analysed from 1970 - present to align with confidence surrounding 'virtually certain' ocean warming having occurred. Information for aims 2, 3 and 4 will be gathered through a combination of field sampling and fish frames donated by recreational and commercial fishers. This research will provide an understanding of the ecology underpinning range shifts in marine fishes, which is necessary to understand how climate change is presently impacting the marine environment. 205 Using Commonwealth environmental water to benefit native fish in the Murray-Darling Basin Ebony A Coote1 1. Department of the Environment, Canberra, ACT, Australia The Commonwealth Environmental Water Office (CEWO) supports the Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder (CEWH) to plan, manage and monitor a portfolio of water for the benefit of the environment. The Commonwealth’s holdings must be managed for the purpose of protecting or restoring the environmental assets of the Murray-Darling Basin. The CEWH's decisions on water use, carryover and trade have been made in the context of, and consistent with, the Murray-Darling Basin Authority’s Basin-wide Environmental Watering Strategy 2014, and annual priorities. Fish are responsive to environmental flows, and managing water specifically for ecological benefits is one element in restoring populations of native fish that have declined across the Basin. Commonwealth environmental watering actions focus on providing environmental flows aimed at improving water quality, supporting native fish habitat, and migration, spawning and recruitment opportunities for native fish within and across catchment boundaries. These actions support native fish through all stages of their lifecycle, as well as contributing to a healthy and resilient Basin environment. Long-term Intervention Monitoring (LTIM) commenced in 2014 and will monitor and evaluate the contribution of Commonwealth environmental water in the Murray-Darling Basin to June 2019. An important component of each LTIM project was the establishment of effective partnerships in environmental water delivery, including with environmental water managers, land and catchment managers, local environmental water management groups, State agencies, academic institutions and community members. A comprehensive data set from monitoring and evaluation activities will emerge over the five year lifespan of the LTIM program, however monitoring undertaken to date supports the CEWO by evaluating adult and larval fish responses to environmental water delivery, along with other indicators of river and wetland health. Examples of environmental water delivery have been provided where methods have been refined and developed in line with adaptive management principles and developing knowledge. 206 Trophic niches of euryhaline and coastal elasmobranchs in northern Australia Sharon L Every1, 2, 3, Heidi R Pethybridge4, Christopher J Fulton2, Peter M Kyne1, David A Crook1 1. RIEL, CDU, Darwin, NT , Australia 2. Research School of Biology, ANU, Canberra, ACT, Australia 3. North Australia Marine Research Alliance, Darwin, NT, Australia 4. CSIRO, Hobart, Tas, Australia By measuring the trophic niche (the diversity of dietary resources used by a species), we can understand how species use and depend on dietary resources. This is especially important in elasmobranchs, given their steep declines and important roles as predators that shape communities and the flow of biomass through ecosystems. Using the niche concept, we aimed to compare an assemblage of euryhaline and coastal elasmobranchs in the South Alligator River (Carcharhinus leucas, C. amboinensis, Himantura dalyensis, Glyphis garricki, G. glyphis, P. pristis and Rhizoprionodontaylori) using stable isotopes (SI) and fatty acids (FA) extracted from muscle tissue samples. We used SI Bayesian ellipses to calculate niche space and overlap among species, with sufficient sample numbers and a modified version of this to calculate FA niche metrics. We compared species δ 13C values and found two guilds of species: one with a marine signature, and the other with an estuarine/freshwater base. Fatty acids largely corroborated these results. However, there were slight differences, particularly for C. leucas, which may have been caused by temporal differences in the uptake of biomarkers. Carcharhinus leucas had the largest SI niche space and was overlapped by R. taylori. Overall, we found that these species provide important connections across riverine, estuarine and coastal ecosystems. 207 Specialized diet of the deep-sea elasmobranch, the prickly dogfish (Oxynotus bruniensis) Brit Finucci1, Carlos Bustamante2, Emma Jones3, Matthew R Dunn1 1. Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand 2. Shark and Ray Research Group, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia 3. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), Auckland, New Zealand Specialist diets have been identified amongst elasmobranch, although the degree of specialization can be subjected to individual specialists, competition, and fluctuations in spatial and temporal prey abundance and availability. Several examples of chondrichthyans playing a large role in diet of other chondrichthyans have been previously documented, although few are known from the deep-sea, and have included large bodied species. The prickly dogfish, Oxynotus bruniensis, is a small (< 75 cm), little known deep-sea elasmobranch distributed on the outer continental and upper slope of southern Australia and New Zealand. Specimens (n = 53) were collected from research trawls surveys and fisheries observers from around New Zealand at depths from 400 to 1300 m. Stomach contents were dissected and prey items were identified to the lowest possible taxon. Findings included Harriotta raleighana embryos and vitellus from unknown origin. 15 stomach samples were analysed with DNA methods, revealing that O. bruniensis preys exclusively on the egg capsules of oviparous chondrichthyans, including Rhinochimaera pacifica and Chimaera carophila. These are the first results of a wild elasmobranch sample relying solely on other chondrichthyans as a food source. In addition to its low reproductive output and high distribution overlap with fishing efforts, the reliance on a specialized diet may make O. bruniensis a particular vulnerable species to overfishing. 208 Sharks, culture and conservation: recognizing the value of Indigenous knowledge and cultural dimensions of sharks and rays Karin Gerhardt1, Amy Diedrich1, Colin Simpfendorfer1, Erin Bohensky2 1. James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia 2. CSIRO, Townsville In shark research and management, as in many natural resource management fields, there remains an opportunity to better understand and appreciate Indigenous knowledge systems to enhance the completeness, value and relevance of available knowledge. Despite the extensive evidence of the cultural significance of sharks and rays for many countries and communities around the world, there is very little research that examines the application or collection of Indigenous knowledge to improve the scientific understanding, conservation and/or management of sharks. This talk will provide an overview of Indigenous knowledge systems and the cultural values attributed to sharks and rays, and will introduce a newly established, collaborative project that involves a number of Traditional Owner groups within the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area. The project aims to recognize and record the Indigenous knowledge regarding sharks and rays that exists for each group. As well as mapping and recording Indigenous knowledge, the project will provide a better understanding of how Traditional Owners want their knowledge to be recognised and applied in science and management. The intricacies of developing a culturally appropriate, collaborative project (such as two-way sharing, Intellectual Property protection in data sharing agreements and community investment and ownership of project outcomes) will also be presented. 209 87 86 Evaluating the use of strontium isotopes ( Sr/ Sr) to unravel habitat use and life history movements of estuarine and freshwater fish in South Australian estuaries Patrick Reis-Santos2, 1, Christopher Izzo1, Justin L. Payne3, Juraj Farkaš4, Bronwyn Gillanders2, Yuexiao Shao4 1. Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia 2. MARE – Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal 3. School of Natural and Built Environments, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia 4. School of Earth Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia Understanding habitat use patterns and life history movements of estuarine and freshwater fish are key to the conservation of native fish populations, particularly migratory (e.g. diadromous, potadromous) species or those that use estuaries as nursery areas. Here, we aimed to evaluate the use of otolith 87Sr/86Sr isotopic ratios to reconstruct estuarine and freshwater habitat use patterns of both native and invasive fish species in several South Australian estuaries. Specifically, we analysed the variation in water 87Sr/86Sr isotopic composition throughout estuarine habitats and freshwater stream end-members in the Onkaparinga, Hindmarsh, and Inman estuaries, as well as the Coorong, Lower Lakes and Murray Mouth; and compared it to the corresponding values in the edge of the otoliths of fish collected at the same sites. In addition, profile analyses of otolith 87Sr/86Sr covering entire fish life histories were performed to characterise potential migratory and habitat use patterns. Overall, 87Sr/86Sr mixing curves varied among estuaries, and the potential to effectively use these natural tags to examine habitat use and individual fish movements is discussed, with results linked to the geological landscape and physical features of these estuarine systems. Ultimately, mapping natural 87Sr/86Sr variations and developing baseline isoscapes for otolith geochemical studies will provide an enhanced framework to unravel fish habitat use and connectivity patterns. 210 Shark cognition and its implication towards wildlife tourism Dennis Heinrich1, 2, Culum Brown4, 3, Charlie Huveneers1, 2 1. School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA, Australia 2. Southern Shark Ecology Group , Adelaide, SA, Australia 3. Behaviour, Ecology and Evolution of Fishes Laboratory, Sydney, NSW, Australia 4. Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia Although the cognitive abilities of bony fishes have been intensely studied, until recently virtually nothing was known about the learning capacity of sharks. Sharks diverged from other groups over 400 million years ago, yet share critical aspects of brain organisation with all vertebrates. This early divergence of sharks from other vertebrates makes sharks an ideal model system to explore the evolution of cognition in vertebrates. The study of cognitive abilities and associative conditioning in elasmobranchs is also crucial given the growing global interest in the behavioural changes and learnt behaviours resulting from interactions with wildlife tourism. This study aims to investigate the cognitive abilities of sharks in relation to behavioural changes linked to wildlife tourism and shark feeding operations. This study will consist of four experimental set-ups. The laboratory-based experiments will first assess the time required for a shark to habituate to a single stimulus using attractants (olfaction, sound, electric field) and deterrents (magnetic and electric field). Secondly, the effects of reward size and training frequency on the time required to associate two distinct events will be investigated using an operant condition design. In the field, sharks will be trained to a feeding schedule to test whether they are able to associate time and place with food and the effects of such feeding regimes on their metabolic requirements. Finally, we will assess shark ability to categorise objects according to their relative position in the water. Understanding the cognitive capabilities of sharks will provide an insight into the mechanisms underpinning shark behaviour, and allow comparisons of the cognitive abilities of this understudied animal group with teleost fishes, insects, birds, and mammals. It will further provide information on the potential effects of wildlife tourism and shark provisioning on the behaviour and the energy requirements of sharks. 211 Black flounder otoliths show complex freshwater life histories Brendan Hicks1, Nicholas Ling1, Freya Robinson1, John Charteris1 1. School of Science, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand We aimed to investigate movement of endemic New Zealand black flounder (Rhombosolea retiaria) between the sea and freshwater through otolith microchemistry. Most flounder are entirely marine, but the black flounder is unusual because it is classified as a freshwater fish but as adults can inhabit the sea, estuaries, lakes, or rivers. Its migration downstream is thought to occur in winter, with juveniles returning to freshwater in spring, but very little is known about its life cycle. To clarify the importance of diadromy in its life history we used laser ablation inductively-coupled mass spectrometry to examine the otoliths of freshwater-caught black flounder. Black flounder from the Mokau River, Taranaki, North Island West Coast, had high strontium with low barium at the beginning of the life cycle, indicating life in the estuary. A drop in strontium accompanied by a rise in barium in later life shows movement into full freshwater. Black flounder from the Clive River, Hawkes Bay, North Island East Coast, however, showed quite complex life histories, with several movements between the estuary and fresh water. In the adjacent Ngaruroro River, black flounder showed low concentrations of strontium throughout life compared to flounder from other rivers, indicating an entirely freshwater existence even when the primordium was laid down during egg development. We conclude that black flounder show a variety of life histories, sometimes with complex patterns of occupancy of the estuary and fresh water, with possible freshwater spawning. 212 Social licence of marine systems: Improving community knowledge and engagement in local marine industries using citizen science Rachel Kelly1 1. University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia Our global oceans are threatened by climate change, overfishing, pollution and a growing list of other impacts that demonstrate an urgent global need for sustainable ocean management. Yet still it lags behind other more ‘visible’ terrestrial sectors. ‘Social licence to operate’ is used broadly across the terrestrial literature, but how can we apply it to marine management? I aim to produce novel understanding as to how social licence may be used to bridge communication gaps and barriers between diverse users of the ocean environment and how we can advance our understanding of social licence by applying it to the marine sector. This project will outline the value of social licence and its global potential towards garnering the cooperative industry-community involvement necessary to advise managers in sharing ocean resources sustainably in our changing world. By means of social research case studies (national and international), I will conduct a qualitative investigation of community understandings of the ocean and social licence of marine systems, including recreational fisheries and marine protected areas, and identify how engagement, knowledge and perceptions of marine realm management might be improved. This research will be among the first attempts to link social licence theory with citizen science, aiming to produce actual practical outcomes that may be applied in sustainable management. The project has considerable potential to produce novel, and influence future, theoretical understandings of social licence and citizen science, and their application in the management and development of sustainable ocean use. 213 Correlations of metabolic rate and body acceleration in three coastal shark species under contrasting temperature regimes Karissa Lear1, Nick Whitney2, Lauran Brewster3, Adrian Gleiss1 1. Murdoch University, Perth, WA, Australia 2. Mote Marine Laboratory, Sarasota, FL, USA 3. University of Hull, Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, United Kingdom The ability to produce estimates of the metabolic rate of free-ranging animals is fundamental to the study of their ecology. However, measuring the energy expenditure of animals in the field has proven difficult, especially for marine and aquatic taxa. Accelerometry is a relatively new technique that presents a means of translating metabolic rates measured in the laboratory to individuals studied in the field, pending appropriate laboratory calibrations. Here these calibrations are presented for three marine predators: nurse sharks (Ginglymostoma cirratum), lemon sharks (Negaprion brevirostris), and blacktip sharks (Carcharhinus limbatus), through simultaneously measuring body movement, as overall dynamic body acceleration (ODBA), and metabolic rate, through respirometry. Calibrations were made at a range of volitional swimming speeds and experimental temperatures. ODBA scaled linearly with oxygen consumption rate, maintaining strong correlations in all three study species, with R2>0.85. The best fit model used ODBA in combination with activity state (active or resting) and temperature to predict metabolic rate in lemon and nurse sharks, and ODBA and temperature to predict metabolic rate in blacktip sharks. The error associated with these predictions was less than 5% in all three species, indicating that accelerometry provides a powerful tool for predicting field metabolic rate in these animals. This study lays the groundwork for calculating the metabolic rate and timeenergy budgets of these species in the wild using acceleration data alone, providing the opportunity for insight into how energetic demands drive behavioural decisions and ecological interactions. 214 Activity patterns and habitat use of juvenile Pastinachus atrus in a coral reef flat environment. Ana Martins1, Colin Simpfendorfer, Andrew Chin, Michelle Heupel 1. JCU, Douglas, QLD, Australia Stingrays (Family Dasyatidae) are common inhabitants of coral reefs. Their dorso-ventral compression allows the exploitation of shallow tidal areas for prey by jetting water and beating pectoral fins to access infauna and meiofauna. This foraging behaviour suggests they may be ecosystem engineers playing critical roles in broad ecosystem processes. As human pressures increase on our oceans both stingrays and coral reefs are coming under increasing threat. A recent global analysis identified that Dasyatidae is one of the most threatened families within this group. Fishing, climate change and other human pressures have lead degradation to coral reefs around the world, placing stress not only on these natural treasures but also the human communities that rely on them. The broad aim of this work was to understand stingrays' movement patterns and habitat use in coral reef flat ecosystems, and also evaluate the importance of these systems to stingrays. For this end, juvenile cowtail (Pastinachus atrus) stingrays were captured in shallow waters of Pioneer Bay (Orpheus Island, QLD) and fitted with Vemco V9 acoustic transmitters. The preliminary results have shown a clear movement pattern performed by juvenile cowtails. Based on the collected track and depth data, juvenile stingrays’ movements appear to be related to tidal variations. The studied individuals seem to prefer resting nearby or under mangrove roots at the high tide and feed during the low tide, using shallow waters and sandy substrates for protection. For this reason, predation risk seems to be an important driver to juvenile stingrays’ movement and habitat use, while abiotic features, such as depth and temperature, seems to have minor influence. 215 Culturally significant fisheries: keystones for management of freshwater social-ecological systems Mae M Noble1, Phil Duncan2, Darren Perry3, Kerry Prosper4, Denis Rose5, Stephen Schnierer6, Gail Tipa7, Erica Williams8, Rene Woods9, 10, Jamie Pittock11 1. The Australian National University, Ainslie, ACT, Australia 2. Gamilaroi Traditional Owner, NSW Aboriginal Land Council, Parramatta, NSW, Australia 3. Chair of MLDRIN, Murray Lower Darling Rivers Indigenous Nations, Canberra, ACT, Australia 4. Chief of Paq'tnekek Mi'kmaq First Nations, Paq'tnekek Mi'kmaq First Nations, Paq'tnekek , Nova Scotia , Canada 5. Indigenous Protected Area Coordinator , Gunditj Mirring Traditional Aboriginal Corporation Owners, Heywood , VIC, Australia 6. School of Environment, Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Lismore , NSW, Australia 7. Manger of Tipa and Associates, Tipa and Associates, Outram , Otago, New Zealand 8. Māori Environmental Research (Te Kūwaha) , Maori and Aquatic Environments National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Viaduct Harbour, Auckland, New Zealand 9. Cultural Flows Research Committee., National Cultural Flows Program, Melbourne , VIC, Australia 10. Director of MLDRIN, Murray Lower Darling Rivers Indigenous Nations,, Canberra, ACT, Australia 11. Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia Formal recognition of the cultural significance of freshwater species to Indigenous people is an important part of equitable ecosystem management that bridges gaps in our culturally sensitive management of these critical species and builds crosscultural relationships. Indigenous peoples of Australia, North America, and New Zealand have a long tradition of harvesting freshwater animals over thousands of generations, and their profound understanding of these freshwater animals and ecosystems have become embedded within their cultural identity. In recognizing such cultural connections, we can all better appreciate the deep significance of changes in the conservation and management of freshwater animals for Indigenous peoples, and work to integrate Indigenous stewardship and ecological knowledge into effective co-management strategies (e.g., Indigenous rangers, research partnerships, Indigenous Protected Areas). We recommend that future policy developments should explicitly incorporate Cultural Keystone Species (CKS), which are species that support both Indigenous cultural identity and key freshwater ecosystem processes. Moreover, CKS can provide focal points for promoting positive policy outcomes that empower Indigenous people and develop innovative management and monitoring programs. In drawing on the understanding of eight Indigenous authors from across Australia, North America, and New Zealand, we reviewed and highlighted the importance of several freshwater CKS, many of which are of trans-Pacific importance. Our hope is that greater emphasis on the equitable management of these CKS will improve the health and wellbeing of the social and ecological components of freshwater ecosystems across the world. 216 Changes in the bycatch of undersized plaice in the North Sea brown shrimp fishery between the 1980s and 2000s. Helen L O'Neill, Adriaan AD Rijnsdorp, Ingrid Tulp Brown shrimp (Crangon crangon) support a lucrative fishery in the Netherlands with fishing effort of the Dutch fleet increasing over the past 30 years. The brown shrimp fishery remains largely unregulated and the industry seeks management to ensure sustainability and to obtain Marine Stewardship Council certification. A major challenge for the fishery are high bycatch rates. European plaice (Pleuronectes platessa), a commercially and ecologically important species, are frequently caught within nursery areas. Increased fishing effort, in combination with the changing distribution of plaice and brown shrimp could have implications on the amount of juvenile plaice bycatch experienced within the brown shrimp fishery. Combined survey, logbook and Vessel Monitoring Survey data were analysed to estimate bycatch based on the overlap between the shrimp fleet and the distribution of plaice in autumn, during 1980-1989 and 2005-2014. Scenarios were developed to assess the likelihood of plaice bycatch in response to changes in the intensity and depth distribution of the shrimp fleet, and changes in the abundance and depth distribution of plaice. Bycatch estimates for 0-, 1- and 2- group plaice are 1,924,287, 613,047 and 82,872 (in thousands) during 1980 – 1989, and 665,932, 25,963 and 2,051 (in thousands) for 2005 – 2014 respectively, suggesting plaice bycatch has reduced since 1980–1989. Scenario comparisons indicate that the changed depth distribution of plaice has the greatest influence on plaice vulnerability, decreasing bycatch rates by 75%, 82% and 95% for 0-, 1- and 2- group plaice respectively. 217 The effect of magnets on the behaviour of draughtboards sharks (Cephaloscyllium laticeps) Elizabeth Chinnappa1, William Hansen2, David Maynard3, Elkana Ngwenya4, Muhammad A Rahman5, Nicholas Rawlinson4, Emma Westlake6, Mike Williams4 1. Wildlife Officer, Wildlife Protection Unit, Department of Environment and Heritage Protection, Townsville, Queensland 2. Australian Fisheries Management Authority, Canberra, ACT, Australia 3. Queen Victoria Museum & Art Gallery , Launceston, TAS, Australia 4. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Launceston, TAS, Australia 5. Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Science, University of Brawijaya, Malang, Indonesia 6. Research Services Officer, Fisheries South Australian Research and Development Institute – SARDI, West Beach , South Australia Draughtboard sharks (Cephaloscyllium laticeps) are a major bycatch in the Tasmanian Southern Rock Lobster fishery (TSRLF). Magnets are effective at deterring sharks around a range of different fishing methods and were tested as an option for reducing the ingress of draughtboard sharks into pots. Over the course of four separate (honours) projects conducted by students from the Australian Maritime College and the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, we measured the reactions of draughtboard sharks to strontium ferrite and neodymium-iron-boron magnets. Two studies were conducted in the natural habitat of the draughtboard sharks and two were controlled experiments with the sharks held in tanks. The two field studies produced inconclusive results due to small sample sizes and the inability to identify the individual sharks that approached the magnets. In the controlled experiments we were able to measure changes in the behaviour of individual draughtboard sharks in close proximity to a magnet, a control and procedural control. The behaviour of the individual sharks varied. Overall, the results of the most recent tank experiment showed that avoidance reactions were observed at the magnet in 10 out of the 12 sharks but for only 6% of the approaches to the magnets. This would suggest that it is unlikely that magnets will significantly deter draughtboard sharks in the TSRLF, however the next proposed series of controlled experiments will involve observing the behaviour of draughtboard sharks around a pot with magnets fitted to the entrance. This poster outlines the relative merits of the different experimental approaches used. It is suggested that measuring the underlying behaviour that is predicted to decrease the catch rates of bycatch species should be considered as an initial step before testing the proposed mitigation measure in a commercial fishery. 218 How the Behaviour of the Gummy Shark During Longline Capture Reduces the Physiological Stress Response Leonardo Guida1, Terence I Walker1, Richard D Reina1 1. Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia Many factors influence the physiological stress response to fisheries capture in elasmobranchs. However, the influence of sea surface temperatures (SST) and behaviour are unknown and crucial considering global fishing pressures. We investigated the effect of SST and behaviour on the physiological stress response to capture of the gummy shark, Mustelus antarcticus, and compared our results to a laboratory study using similar conditions to test whether stress responses of in situ capture are consistent with those from laboratory simulations. Capture time for 23 M. antarcticus ranged 32–241 min as measured by hook timers or time depth recorders (TDR) in SSTs ranging 12–20°C. TDR data from 13 M. antarcticus were analysed to quantify capture behaviour as the percentage of time spent moving during capture. Several physiological variables measured from blood samples obtained immediately upon the animals’ landing indicated that although warmer SSTs increased metabolic rate, the stress response to capture was not exacerbated by capture duration. During capture movement occurred for an average of 10% of the time and since M. antarcticus can respire whilst stationary, restricted movement probably mitigated potential influences of increased SSTs and capture duration on the stress response. Previous laboratory findings were also shown to be indicative of in situ conditions and we thus advise that studies control for water temperature given the influence it has on variables (e.g. lactate) used to measure capture stress in elasmobranchs. We highlight the importance of seasonal water temperatures and capture behaviour when assessing the resilience to fisheries capture and the implementation of appropriate fisheries management strategies. 219 Global fisheries models: historical estimates and future developments. Yannick Rousseau1 1. UTAS, Hobart, TAS, Australia The potential yield of oceans has been a research topic since the early 60s. Direct extrapolation of catch data has led to regional and global models. These models attempt to capture and integrate ecological, economical and social aspects, or so it seems. Looking into the parameterization of such models is paramount to understand uncertainties in current estimates of global fisheries yield. A review of the literature from the past 50 years reveals a range of estimates varying between a predicted collapse and over 2 billion tonnes of seafood harvestable per year. These estimates are, however, the direct results of various global models, which still show a strong rift between biomass-based and socioeconomic approaches. The definition of what is “harvestable” still depends on the perspective - ecological or human. Although bioeconomics and end-to-end models aim at bridging this rift, their focus still reflects the disciplinary biases of their components, and they have fallen in the fallacy of complexity. Truly integrated socio-ecological models are rare at global levels, although expanding on the range of regional ones available. The challenge is not expanding regional models globally, but developing models complex enough to represent the feedback effect between biological, economical and human components, while simple enough to reach a broad audience. Even so, many points of focus in these components require attention. Landings (reported catch) still is used as a proxy for mortality, ignoring illegal fishing or discards, which can account for over a third. Drivers of the global fleet remain vastly unknown, leading to estimates of future catch still extrapolated from past trends. Future socio-ecological model of global fisheries should aim at addressing these uncertainties and reach a balance between parsimony, scope and fit. 220 Using network analysis to explore co-occurrence patterns of white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) aggregating at the Neptune Islands, South Australia Adam Schilds1, Stephan Leu1, Charlie Huveneers1 1. School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Bedford Park, SA, Australia Group living and social behaviour have been documented in a wide range of animals and are driven by an ongoing trade-off between the benefits and costs of associating with other individuals. Although white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) are considered to be mostly solitary, they are known to aggregate at several sites worldwide. Exploring co-occurrence of individuals in relation to the characteristics of the aggregation sites can be a useful tool to provide insight into the ecology of white sharks and better understand the drivers underpinning these aggregations. Network analysis techniques coupled with photoidentification data was used to infer co-occurrence patterns of 97 sharks over 32-months, split into two 16-month periods. Eight dyads occurred with a greater frequency than would be expected by chance and were temporally stable. None of these dyads, however, persisted over the two periods. Although association patterns were evident at the dyadic level, we found limited support for stable communities or network structure. Quasi-Akaike’s information criterion fitted to standardised lagged association rates described the persistence of associations to be best characterised using a ‘two levels of casual acquaintances’ model. Associations primarily occurred between individuals of the same sex, and groupings of individuals, where discernible were primarily based on sex. These were linked to seasonal differences in abundance between the sexes. Nevertheless, some males associated with females in autumn and early winter. These males may contest a potential dominance hierarchy of females in this period or employ scramble competition tactics, enabling feeding during the Neptune Islands highest period of food availability. Our network analysis shows that the white shark population visiting the Neptune Islands is not gregarious, but that some individuals form associations for several days and across several months. 221 Connecting the dots: The movements of reef manta rays (Manta alfredi) and its implications for manta conservation and management in Raja Ampat, Indonesia Edy Setyawan1, Calvin Beale2, Mark Erdmann3, Andrew Fischer1, James Haddy1, Sarah Lewis4, Ronald Mambrasar5, Abraham Sianipar6 1. University of Tasmania, Newnham, TAS, Australia 2. Misool Eco Resort, Sorong, Indonesia 3. Conservation International, Auckland, New Zealand 4. Manta Trust, Bali, Indonesia 5. Conservation International, Sorong, Indonesia 6. Conservation International, Jakarta, Indonesia Publish consent withheld 222 Size-at-settlement and its relationship to population of origin in the Southern Rock Lobster, Jasus edwardsii Cecilia Villacorta-Rath1, Jan M Strugnell2, Nick P Murphy2, Carla Souza, Klaas Hartmann1, Caleb Gardner1, Bridget Green1 1. Institue for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia 2. Department of Ecology, Environment and Evolution, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia Settlement is a key factor determining recruitment into the fishery in marine organisms. However, little is known about the processes driving settlement patterns due to the difficulties associated to tracking larvae in the ocean. An alternative to this problem is to use molecular markers in recently settled individuals in order to determine population of origin and level of kinship between settlers. The present study aims to investigate whether Jasus edwardsii settles in genetic cohorts and to examine the relationship between puerulus morphological attributes and genetic identity. Recently settled puerulus were collected in 2012 from three sites in Tasmania during three winter months. Samples were sequenced through five double-digest restriction site associated DNA sequencing (ddRADseq) libraries using the Illumina HiSeq platform. Demultiplexed reads were used to create a reference catalog of loci and individual reads were then mapped to the reference catalog and variant calling was performed. Kinship analysis revealed that a large proportion of pueruli had 2 nd and 3rd degree relationship and a small proportion of samples were full siblings. Population structure was investigated through a Discriminant Analysis of Principal Components and identified two clusters among all locations and settlement pulses. A logistic model identified a negative relationship between DAPC grouping and body size, suggesting that individuals from one of the groups were significantly smaller than the other. These results give insight into the non-random nature of settlement in a species with protracted pelagic larval duration and could suggest the existence of chaotic genetic patchiness in J. edwardsii adult populations. Index 36 Berghuis, A 99 Cameron, M.J 15 Graham, P 192 Berkenpas, E 118 Campbell, H 185 2016-01, C 122 Berry, O 22,76 Campbell, R 160 Adams, M 196 Berry, T.E 86 Cannella, L 157 Alexander, K.A 157 Bice, C 104 Canning, A 90 Allen, G 195,56 Bierwagen, S.L 46 Caprentier, L 44 Allen, M 109 Black, K 16 Carter, C 65,95 Amtstaetter, F 103 Blanchard, J.L 20,21 Carton, A.G 93 Anderson, J 27 Blanchard , J.L 156 Cassey, P 136 Andrews, J 70 Blower, D.C 75 Andrzejaczek, S 34 Blythe, J 135 Castillo-Jordan, 18 C Appleyard, S Bockel, T 44 Catalano, S.R 152 33 Garcia, V 110,125 Appleyard, S.A 142 Bode, M 13 Cawich, C Apps, K 137 Bohensky, E 208 Chambers, S.L 12 Armstrong, A.J 78 Bonaldo, R 47 Champion, C 204 Armstrong, A.O 201 Bone, E 141 Chapple, T.K 34 Armstrong, E Booker, D.J 158 Chapuis, L 26 211 132 Ashe, H 202 Boon, C 181 Charteris, J Asmus, M 192 Booth, D 165 Cheshire, K 105,106 Attard, C 195 Borg, D 103 Chin, A Augspurger, J 38 Boubée, J.A 159 153,214,31,32,49, 50,74 Awruch, C.A 62 Bowen, C.D 182 Chinnappa, E 217 Baje, L 110,49 Boys, C.A 190 Choukroun, S 13 Balcombe , S 108,194,54 Bradford, R 172 Clark, J 58 Ballesta, L 88 Bravington, M 76 Clark, T 203 Barnes, A.C 140 Brewster, L 213 Clark, T.D 93 Barnes, P 81 Brierley, A 147 Clear, R 200,39 Barnett, A 118 Brinkman, R 146 Closs, G 38 Barrett, N.S 169 Broadhurst, B 200,39 Clua, E 88 Barton, D 60 Broadhurst, M 130 Cobcroft, J.M 119 Barton, D.P 59,61 Brodie, S 167,89 Cockayne, B 17 Bass, N.C 161 Brooks, S 195 Coleman, M 86 Battaglene, S 65 113,12,161,195,21 0,58 Collier, K 179 Brown, C Collin, S.P 26 93 Baumgartner, L 101 Bax, N 76 Brown, P 70 Collins, G.M Bayliss, P 102 Bruce, B 172,68 Commens, S 187 Beale, C 221 Buckle, D 166,37 Conchon, A 123 Beatty, S 109,203 Bulman, C 22 Connell, S.D 86 Beckman, C 68 Bunce, M 86 Constable, A 148,20 Beerkens, N 203 Burgess, K 67 Coote, E.A 205 Beheregaray, L 195 Burndred, K 17 Copeland, C 105,106 Beitzel, M 191 Burnell, O 130,131 Copland, P 133 Bell, J 8,9 Burrows, D 195 Cottrell, R.S 156 Bellwood, D 47,57,94 Burrows, M.T 63 Couch, A 139,98 Bellwood, D.R 48 Bustamante, C 207 Coulton, L 141 Bennett, M.B 24,67,78 Bylemans, J 40 Cowman, P.F 124 Bennett, M 115,79 Cadiou, G 86 Cox, M 148 Benthuysen, J 146 Cahill, M 128 Cox, M.J 147 Calmettes, B 123 Cresswell, A 43 Cribb, B 115 Ellis, I 105,106 Georgeson, L 173 Crook, D 102,166,59,60 Erdmann, M 221,56 Gerhardt, K 208 Crook, D.A 206,61,69 Espinoza, M 30 Gervais, C 117,121 Crook, D.D 188 Evans, K 10 Gervias, C 116 Crow, S.K 158 Evans, L 191 Ghanawi, J 157 Crumlish, M 157 Everett, J 36 Giles, J 154 Cruz, D 36 Everett, J.D 167,35 Gillanders, B 1,136,209,86 Cubillos, L 18 Every, S.L 206,69 Gillanders, B.M 96 Cui, P 197 Cumming, G 135 Fairweather, P.G 170 Currey, L.M 189 Farkaš, J 81 Farrell, T Gilligan, D 196 Gilmore, K.L 96 209 Giri, K 70 155 Gladstone, W 51 D'Alberto, B.M 49 Fassler, S 132 Gledhill, D 125 Daley, R 11 Fassler, S.M 133 Gleeson, D 40 Daniel, A 184 Fernandes, P.G 132,133 Gleiss, A 203,213 Daning Tuzan, A 65 Ferrari, R 86 Gleiss, A.C 34 Davis, A 42 Feutry, P 76,77 Goatley, C 47 161,58 Figueira, W.F 86 de la Chesnais, 23 T Finucci, B 207,27 Goldsworthy, S.D 86 Fischer, A 221 Graham, A 125 de Winton, M 179 Fisher, E.A 176 Grammer, G 152,6 Death, R 90 Fisk, A.T 87 Grant, M.I 50 Deng, R 160 Fitzgibbon, Q 65,95 Gray, C.A 167 Dennis, D 160 Fleming, A 156 Graziano, M 157 Devloo-Delva, F 77,87 Fogarty, H.E 63 Green, B 222 Diedrich, A 208 Fontes, J 14 Green, M.E 142,25 Diggle, J 197 Ford, A 85 Grewe, P.M 76 Dimmock, K 137 Forestier, R 21 Grewe, P.M 77 Dodd, L 84 Fowler, A 164,165 Grieg, A 59,61 Doidge, C 37 Fox, C.J 157 Grutter, A.S 64 Domeier, M 88 Fox, R 47 Grutzner, F 197 Donaldson, J.A 85 Francis, M.P 7 Guida, L 218,62 Doubell, M 129 Franklin, C 185 Gunasekera, R 76 Doubleday, Z 136 Fredberg, J 198 Habary, A 121 Doubleday, Z.A 96 Freeman, R 155 Hackett, G 187 Douglas, M 166 Frusher, S 134,168,18 Haddy, J 221,52 Douglas, M.M 102 Fulton, B 19 Hale, R 188 Drew, M 162 Fulton, C 200,28,94 Hall, K 70 du Dot, T 171 Fulton, C.J 206,45,69 Hall, N.G 72 Dudgeon, C 60,61 Fulton, E.A 21 Hamer, P 16,164,177,18 Dudgeon, C.L 141,78 Fulton, E 22,23 Hamer, P.W 71 Duffy, C.A 7 Fulton, E.A 156 Hammer, M 107,195 Duggan, I 199 Furlan, E 40 Hams, A 203 Duncan, M 192 Garcia , E.A 102 Hansen, S 70 Duncan, P 215 Garcia, J 44 Hansen, W 217 Dunn, M.R 207,27 Gardner, C 222 Harasti, D 172 Dwyer, R 185 Gastauer, S 132,133 Harding, J 107 Dyer, F 139,39,91,98 Gauthier, A 115 Hardy, C.M 40 Ebner, B.C 85 Gauthier, M 24 Hardy, N.A 86 Edson, J 24 Gauthier, S 132,199 Harrison, H 13 Cvitanovic, C Day, J Hart, N.S 26 Jenkins, G 16 Lintermans, M 139,193,195,200,4 0,91,98 Hartmann, K 222,73 Johansen, J 117,121 Hartog, J.R 167 Johnson, C 21 Little, R 128 Harvey, E 169 Johnson, C.R 15 Lloyd, D 137 Hatton, S 91 Johnson, G 76 Loneragan, N 138 Haward, M 134 Johnson, G.J 154 Longmore, A 16 129 Hawes, S 36 Johnson, J 107 Luick, J Haywood, M 43 Johnson, M.S 116 Lyle, J 75,8,9 Hearnden, M 59,60,61 Jones, A 136 Lyle, J.M 73 Hegarty, A 51 Jones, E 207,27 Lymbery, A 109 Heinrich, D 210 Jones, G.P 13 Lyon, J 187 166 Heinrich, D.D 116 Jones, P.L 112 Maas, R Helidoniotis, F 174 Jones, P 38 132,133 Hernández, S.I 77 Jordan, A 42 MacLennan, D.N 214,30,31,32,46,5, 74 Kelaher, B.P 86 Maes, G 87 Heupel, M Kellie, S 140 Maes, G.E 143 Heupel, M.R 189,87 Kelly, R 212 Maes, G.E 77 Maher, S 60,61,79 Maher, S.L 24 Mahmud, R 180 Heymans, S.J 157 Kemp, J 164 Hicks, B 179,211 Kendrick, G 43 Hicks, B.J 199 Kennelly, S 130 Hill, N 169 King, A 166,37 Hillary, R 76 Kloser, R.J 144 Hobday, A 11,134,149,204,80 ,81,95 Knip, D 31 Knott, N 161,42 Kock, A.A 118 Koehn, J 108,187 Koehn, J.D 84 Koster, W.M 188 Kraver, D.W 116 Kyne, P.M 206,69,76 Lacksen, K 166 Laird, R 172 Lam, C.H 10 Lange, M 163 Langlois, T 43 Lara-Lopez, A 127,35 Laurenson, L.J 112 Lawson, C 89 Layton, C 15 Lear, K 213 Leathwick, J 179 Ledee, E 30,32 Lee, K.A 172 Lehodey, P 123,163 Leis, J.M 13 Leroy, B 10 Leu, S Hobday, A.J 167 Hodges, K 100 Hoeksma, S 203 Hoey, A 94 Hoey, A.S 48 Hohnberg, D 192 Holdsworth, J 7 Holland, K 171 Holmes, B 79 Holmes, B.J 24 Hooper, G 130 Howson, T 191 Huey, J 194 Hughes, A 157 Hughes, J 194 Hughes, J.M 151 Hume, S 195 Humphries, P 84 Hunt, D.E 119 Hutson, K.S 64 Hutton, T 160 Huveneers, C 114,137,170,210,2 20,68 Ikedife, D.N 186 Izzo, C 209 James, C 129 Jekabsons, M 191 Mallen-Cooper, 104 M Malthouse, P 129 Mambrasar, R 221 Marcus, L 66 Margraf, J 120 Marie, A.D 33 Marquez, M.C 111 Marsden, T 101,99 Marshall , A.D 67 Marshall , L 154 Marthick, J.R 76 Martin, K 195 Martins, A 214 Mason, L.B 13 Matley, J.K 87 Maynard, D 217 Maynard, J.A 88 Mcallister, J.S 77 McCauley, R.D 26 McCormack, S.A 20 McDonald, J 81 McGregor, F 202 McGuffie, P 40 Meekan, M 66 Meekan, M.G 34 220 MelbourneThomas, J 148,20 Lewis, S 221 Messmer, V 178 Ling, N 179,184,199,211 Meyer, C 171 Linklater, M 42 Meyer, L 68 Meyer, L.C 25 Patten, N 129 Revill, A 22 Middleton, J.F 129 Pattiaratchi, C 145 Richardson, A.J 144,35,78 Militz, T.A 64 Miller, C 33 Pattiaratchi , C.B 34 Miskiewicz, T 36 Payne, J.L 209 Moloney, P 103 payne, N.L 127 Pazmino, D.A Rico, C 33 Rigby, C.L 53 Rijnsdorp, A.A 216 114,118,92 Roberts, D.T 185 143 Robinson, F 211 70 Pearce, L 84 Robinson, L.M 63 Moore, G 107 Pease, B 190 Robinson, W 192 Moreno, D 8,9 Pecl, G 168,204,23,3,95 Rogers, P.J 162 Moreno, D.A 75 Pecl, G.T 63 Rose, D 215 109,184 Pelletier, D 44 Ross-Magee, P 83 24 Penrose, L 70 Rousseau, Y 219 75 Pepperell, J 79 Rowling, K 175 Pepperell, J.G 24 Rummer, J 116,117,121,4 Moltmann, T Moore, A Morgan, D Morgan, J.A Morgan, J.A Morrongiello, J.R 188,84 Perry, D 215 Ryan, K.L 72 Mourier, J 161,88 Peterken, C 99 Ryan, K 82 Moy, K.G 55 Peterson, E 54 Ryan, L.A 26 Munroe, S 31,32 Pethybridge, H 122,22,66,68 Ryan, S 198 Murphy, H 85 Sabub, B 110 Murphy, N.P 222 Pethybridge, H.R Nash, K 21 SandovalCastillo, J 195 Nash, K.L 135 Saunders, R 60 Nash, K.L 156 Saunders, R.J 61 Nay, T 117,121 Saunders, T 59,60,61 Nay, T.J 116 Schaefer, K.M 10 Near, T 124 Schaffer, J 195,85 Newman, S.J 59,61 Schilds, A 220 Newman, S 60 Schilling, H 36,89 Ngwenya, E 217 Schilling, H.T 151 Nichols, P 66 Schnierer, S 215 Nichols, P.D 68 Scoulding, B 132,133 Nicol, S 10,163,173,70 Scrivens, S 136 Nielsen, E 79 Scutt Phillips, J 10,163 Nielsen, E.E 24 Semmens, J 11,114,8,9 Noble, M.M 215 Semmens, J.M 118,75 Noell, C 130 Sen Gupta, A 163 Norazmi, L 197,41 Senina, I 123 Novak, P.A 102 Senina, I.N 163 Nyegaard, M 138 Setyawan, E 221 O'Connor, J 103 Shao, Y 209 O'Mahony, J 187 Shelamoff, V 15 O'Neill, H.L 216 Sheldon, F 54 Ovenden, J 142,60,61,75,79 Shepard, C.M 118 Ovenden, J.R 24,78 Sianipar, A 221 Oxley, A.P 152 Parravicini, V 88 Partridge, G 203 Patil, J 41 Patil, J.G 180,197 206,69 Phonekhamphe 101 ng, O Pillans, R.D 76 Pilling, G.M 10 Piovano, S 33 Pita, C 157 Pittock, J 215 Plagányi, E 160 Planes, S 88 Pogonoski, J 125 Pogonoski, J.J 126 Poloczanska, E.S 63 Pratchett, M 178 Prosper, K 215 Proud, R 147 Prowse, T 136 Purser, J 180,197,41 Purser, J.G 119 Pusey, B 102 Rahman, M.A 217 Rawlinson, N 217 Rawlinson, N.J 119 Raymond, S 108 Real, K 194 Redondo, A 129 Rees, M 42 Reina, R.D 218,62 Reis-Santos, P 209 Renshaw, G 117 Renshaw, G.M 116 Simpfendorfer, 153,208,214,30,31 C ,32,46,50,74 Simpfendorfer, 143,49,53,87 C.A Singhanouvong, 101 D Sippel, T 7 Tipa, G 158,215 Ward, D 29 Smart, J 153,50 Titaud, O 123 Ward, P 70 Smart, J.J 49 Tobin, A 153,30 Ward, T 136,35 Smith, J.A 167,35,92 Tobin, A.J 87 Watanabe, Y 114 Smith, M.D 71 Todd, C 108 Watanabe, Y.Y 118 Smith, S 165 Todd, C.R 84 Watsham, J 203 Souza, C 222 Tonin, H 146 Watson , R 156 Spillman, C.M 167 Tonkin, Z 187 Webb, L 105,106 Steel, A 54 Townsend, A 105,106 Welch, D 60 Steer, M 152 Townsend, K.A 78 Welch, D.J 59,61 Steffensen, J 117,121 Townsend, S 166 Weltz, K 75 Stehfest, K.M 118 Tracey, S 18,204,23,70 Wenger, L.N 45 Steinberg, C 146 Tracey, S.R 142,73 Westlake, E 152,217 Sternberg, D 194 Travers, M.J 61 Stewart, J 151,165,51 Travers, M 60 White, W 110,142,153,50,56 ,74 Stitchbury, G 179 Trebilco, R 148,20 White, W.T 49,53 115 150 Stobutzki, I 173,70 Trinnie, F.I 112,72 Whitehead, D Streit, R.P 48 Tuck, G 18 Whiterod, N Strugnell, J.M 222 Tulp, I 216 Whitmarsh, S.K 170 Stuart, I 103,108 Turschwell, M 54 Whitney, N 213 Sumner, M 148 Twiname, S 95 Whitten, A 177 146 Suthers, I 151,36,89 Udyawer, V 185 Wild-Allen, K Suthers, I.M 167,35 Unmack, P 195,196 Williams, D.K 146 Svozil, D.P 97 Unmack, P.J 139 Williams, E 215 Swadling, K 35 Usu, T 10 Williams, E.K 159 Sweetman, P 52 Williams, M 217 Williamson, D 13 Taillebois, L 59,60,61 van Herwerden, 143 L Tatsumi, M 15 van Keulen, M 202 WIlson, G 55 Taylor, J 60,61 van Lier, J 28,45 Wise, B.S 72 Taylor, J.A 59 van Ruth, P 129,35 Wood, G 86 Taylor, M.D 167 van Sebille, E 163 Wood, S 199 Teixeira, J 14 Vaughan, D.B 64 Woodhead, J 166 Tempero, G 184 Veale, L.J 150 Woods, R 100,215 Thomas, G.A 119 Vila Pouca, C 113,12 Wos-Oxley , M.L 152 Thomas, S 141 Wright, J.T 15 Thomson, D 43 Villacorta-Rath, 222 C Yates, J 135 Virtue, P 66 Yick, J.L 183 Wainwright, P 94 Yopak, K 2 Walker, T.I 112,218,62 Yopak, K.E 26 Walter, S 115 Zampatti, B 104,108 Walters, A 148 Zoccola, E 140 Waples, K 81 Thomson, R.B 77 Thorncraft, G 101 Thuesen, P 85 Thwaites, L 198 Tibbets, I 115 Tickell, S 166