Trophodynamics of the eastern Great Australian Bight ecosystem: Ecological change associated with the growth of Australia's largest fishery

Date

2013

Authors

Goldsworthy, S.
Page, B.
Rogers, P.
Bulman, C.
Wiebkin, A.
McLeay, L.
Einoder, L.
Baylis, A.
Braley, M.
Caines, R.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Ecological Modelling, 2013; 255(C):38-57

Statement of Responsibility

Simon D. Goldsworthy, Brad Page, Paul J. Rogers, Cathy Bulman, Annelise Wiebkin, Lachlan J. McLeay, Luke Einoder, Alastair M.M. Baylis, Michelle Braley, Robin Caines, Keryn Daly, Charlie Huveneers, Kristian Peters, Andrew D. Lowther, Tim M. Ward

Conference Name

Abstract

We used the Ecopath with Ecosim software to develop a trophic mass-balance model of the eastern Great Australian Bight ecosystem, off southern Australia. Results provide an ecosystem perspective of Australia's largest fishery, the South Australian sardine fishery, by placing its establishment and growth in the context of other dynamic changes in the ecosystem, including: the development of other fisheries; changing abundances of apex predator populations and oceanographic change. We investigated the potential impacts of the sardine fishery on high tropic level predators, particularly land-breeding seals and seabirds which may be suitable ecological performance indicators of ecosystem health. Results indicate that despite the rapid growth of the sardine fishery since 1991, there has likely been a negligible fishery impact on other modelled groups, suggesting that current levels of fishing effort are not impacting negatively on the broader ecosystem structure and function in the eastern Great Australian Bight. Results highlight the importance of small pelagic fish to higher trophic levels, the trophic changes that have resulted from loss and recovery of apex predator populations, and the potential pivotal role of cephalopod biomass in regulating ‘bottom-up’ trophic processes. The ability to resolve and attribute potential impacts from multiple fisheries, other human impacts and ecological change in this poorly understood region is highlighted by the study, and will be critical to ensure future ecologically sustainable development within the region.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Crown Copyright © 2013 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record