The Western and Central Pacific Tuna Fishery. Professor Glenn Hurry Executive Director WCPFC

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The Western and Central Pacific Tuna Fishery Professor Glenn Hurry Executive Director WCPFC

A Brief history of pacific Tuna fisheries 2014 Stock assessments A few thoughts on the future

It all started a long time ago Forum leaders role and why MHLC/Prepcon/WCPFC First Commission after the Fish Stocks Large EEZ based catch Has very good tools and measures (CMMS) Yet to take a hard decision to manage a fishery WCPFC works with FFA/SPC and PNA room for all of us

43 Member and cooperating non member countries 60% world tuna catch Tuna fisheries provide significant income to PIC&T s Fisheries still in reasonably good shape?? Maybe Needs to prove its credentials for stock management this year

What do we catch? Bigeye Tuna 161,679 mt 2012 Yellowfin Tuna 665,668 mt 2012 Skipjack Tuna 1,664,309 mt 2012 Albacore Tuna 131,872mt 2012

Mainly skipjack and small yellowfin are caught by purse seine gear. Most catch is for canning. About 75% of the tuna catch in the WCPO region is by purse seine gear, about 1.9 million tonnes in 2009. Most of the purse seine catch is taken within 5 degrees of the equator.

Most tuna caught by longliners are large size yellowfin, bigeye, and albacore. The prime yellowfin and bigeye often are exported fresh to overseas markets. Most of the albacore is for canning. About 10% of the tuna catch in the WCPO region is by longline gear, about 240,000 tonnes in 2009. There are two major types of longliners: (1) relatively large vessels with mechanical freezing equipment (often based outside the Pacific Islands), and (2) smaller vessels that mostly use ice to preserve fish and are typically based at a port in the Pacific Islands.

Mainly skipjack and small yellowfin are caught by pole-and-line gear. Most catch is for canning or producing a dried product. About 7% of the tuna catch in the WCPO region is by pole-and-line gear, about 147,000 tonnes in 2009. In the 1980s several Pacific Island countries had fleets of these vessels, but most no longer operate due to competition with the more productive purse seine gear

Large-scale trolling targets albacore for canning. Gear types other than the three listed above are responsible for about 13% of tuna catch in the WCPO. Large-scale trolling is an important part of this. It is carried out in the cool water to the south and north of the Pacific Islands region. Trolling in the south results in about 5,000 tonnes of albacore annually.

Catch (mt) 1960 WCP-CA Tuna Catch by gear 1962 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972 Other (mainly ID/PH artisanal) (11%) 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Highlighting 2012 catches 2,800,000 2,400,000 2,000,000 1,600,000 PURSE SEINE OTHER POLE-AND-LINE LONGLINE 1,200,000 800,000 400,000 0 2012 Provisional estimates Total Catch 2,613,528 mt (highest on record...) Purse seine 1,816,503 mt (69% ; record...) Longline 262,076 mt (10% ; stable ) Pole-and-line 224,207 mt (9% ; lowest since late-1960s)

Catch (mt) WCP-CA Tuna Catch by species 1960 1962 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Highlighting 2012 catches 2,800,000 2,400,000 2,000,000 SKIPJACK YELLOWFIN BIGEYE ALBACORE 1,600,000 1,200,000 800,000 400,000 0 2012 Provisional estimates SKJ : 1,664,309 mt (64%; 3 rd highest...) YFT : 655,668 mt (25% ; clear record ) BET : 161,679 mt (6% ; highest since 2004...) ALB : 131,872 mt (5%; 2 nd highest...) ALB (S Pac) : 87,012 mt (stable; 2 nd highest...) ALB (N Pac) : 81,525 mt

Year Num of Boats PS No LL vessel s PS Catch total Catch SKJ Catch YFT Total catch Know n new builds Under const Feb 2014 Para 50 replacem ents advised 2000 226 4,633 1,166,021 780,419 334,828 1,820,000 14 2004 225 4,288 1,386,792 999,835 316,028 2,210,000 14 2010 281 3,526 1,702,808 1,304,613 342,236 2,504,557 26 2012 287 3,000 1,798,776 1,339,502 390,921 2,628,160 20 2013 (prov) 295 2,966 1,793,253 1,486,084 270,494 2,596,950 12 2014 305 37 (17 WCPFC) 78 new 61ns, 17s

Bigeye, Yellowfin, Skipjack Bigeye assessment review Application of model changes to the YFT and SKJ

Skipjack tuna is a notoriously difficult species to assess. Due to skipjack s high and variable productivity (i.e. annual recruitment is a large proportion of total biomass), it is difficult to detect the effect of fishing on the population with standard fisheries data and stock assessment methods. (M Maunder) The effects of the FAD closure 2013? Change to recording fishing days.searching days became non fishing days 298-162 Range contraction Localized depletion (Archipelagic waters?) El Nino/ La Nina effects on productivity

SKJ 3-5 regions (S1-S5 below) S1: 20N 40N 120E 150W S4 S5 S2 S1 S3 S2: 0 20N 140E 170E & 5S 0 155E -170E & 5S 20S 160E -170E S3: 20S 20N 170E 150W S4: 20N 10S 120E 140E S5: 0.5S 20S 140E 160E & 5S 0 140E -155E 3 regions (2011): S1, S2 (combined S2, S4, and S5), and S3

2012/13 BE review questioned use of tagging data Looked at new assessment areas; BET and YFT from 6 to 9 regions. re-defining the spatial structure to have a separate area for ID and PH, better treatment of the size data and adding a considerable amount of new tagging data.

BET 9 regions (B1-B9 below) B1: 20N 50N 120E 170E B1 B2 B3: 0 20N 140E 170E & 5S 0 155E -170E & 5S 10S 160E -170E B7 B3 B8 B9 B5 B4 B6 B4: 10S 20N 170E 150W B5: 10S 40S 140E 170E B6: 10S 40S 170E 150W B7: 20N 10S 110E 140E B8: 0.5S 10S 140E 160E & 5S 0 140E -155E B9: 15S 20S 140E 150E

Technology improvements and Effort creep Satellite sonar buoys for FADs Bird radar Side scanning sonar Real time access to Oceanographic information How much has technology driven catch levels and how much is more boats

A man who is used to acting in one way never changes; he must come to ruin when the times, in changing, no longer are in harmony with his ways. Niccolò Machiavelli, The Prince

Year Num of Boats PS No LL vessel s PS Catch total Catch SKJ Catch YFT Total catch Know n new builds Under const Feb 2014 Para 50 replacem ents advised 2000 226 4,633 1,166,021 780,419 334,828 1,820,000 14 2004 225 4,288 1,386,792 999,835 316,028 2,210,000 14 2010 281 3,526 1,702,808 1,304,613 342,236 2,504,557 26 2012 287 3,000 1,798,776 1,339,502 390,921 2,628,160 20 2013 (prov) 295 2,966 1,793,253 1,486,084 270,494 2,596,950 12 2014 305 37 (17 WCPFC) 78 new 61ns, 17s

Purse seine effort (days) Longline effort (100 hooks) 14,000,000 Longline Effort 12,000,000 10,000,000 8,000,000 6,000,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 70,000 Purse Seine Effort 60,000 50,000 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

400,000 350,000 300,000 250,000 200,000 150,000 100,000 50,000 0 1992199319941995199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013

Value of the fisheries Capacity and over capacity Improvements in technology Betting against history Ability of the key agencies to force discipline The messages leaders get Should be proud of achievements 2050 and what more people mean to us Coastal stocks importance Food security

W. Atlantic E. Atlantic Indian E. Pacific Skipjack 2006 OK 2006 OK 2012 OF?? 2005 Yellowfin 2011 OF 2011 2011 (G 38%) OF Bigeye 2010 OF 2010 OF 2013 (40%) 2012 OF? 2013? N. Atlantic S. Atlantic Indian N. Pacific Albacore 2013 OF 2013 OF 2010 B of (29%) Key Overfished and overfishing rebuilding plan in place Overfished OR overfishing. CMMs needed Not overfished, nor is overfishing occurring W. Pacific 2014 2014 2014 S. Pacific From Int. Seafood Sustainabili ty Foundation

World population: 7 billion (2012) 9.3 billion (2050)

Value (GDP%, industry exposure) Different players different goals and drivers Maximizing short term profit, at odds with long-term investors History would tell us we won t change Greed will outweigh commonsense Deals within deals The WCPFC and PNA need teeth be dynamic We will go on building boats

This is a great resource It all that some of these countries will have We will need target reference points and hard decisions on stock management Learn to play by the rules Think before you add more boats/capacity