Spanner crab monitoring program update

The number, sex and size of spanner crabs caught during scientific surveys are recorded

Monitoring the size, sex and abundance of spanner crabs assists in the sustainable harvest of the stock.

Spanner crabs (Ranina ranina) support an important fishery in southern Queensland (about 1200 tonnes annually).

Crabs are targeted commercially, and to a lesser extent recreationally, using baited dillies (traps) deployed in oceanic waters to a depth of 100 metres

Fisheries Queensland has conducted a biological monitoring program for spanner crabs since 2000. The objectives of the monitoring are to estimate abundance of crabs and develop a time series of data to improve the certainty of stock assessments. In 2006, New South Wales Department of Primary Industries adopted a similar survey technique, and data sharing arrangements for management of the joint fishery were put in place.

How are the data used?

Spanner crabs are monitored using dillies (traps) deployed at selected sites within the survey area

Information collected during the annual spanner crab surveys is combined with information from other sources (including details of catch and effort from compulsory commercial logbooks) to carry out regular assessments of the performance of the fishery and status of the stock, in relation to pre-determined criteria. In particular, the results are used to help set the annual quota for the commercial fishery.

How are they monitored?

An annual survey is carried out in May using chartered commercial or department vessels. Sampling is conducted at pre-determined sites within the main fishing area between Gladstone and the Gold Coast, using standard commercial fishing gear. All crabs captured are measured and have their sex determined before being returned to the water. Information is also collected periodically about any other species caught incidentally using the standard fishing gear.