The toothfish fishery

Find out more about the toothfish fishery, including its history, catch, sea ice influences and fishery operational requirements.

Ross Sea mean sea ice concentration
You can find details about the fishery’s history in the Subarea 88.1 fishery report published every year by CCAMLR.

Read the Subarea 88.1 fishery reports

Read more on the spatial management of the Ross Sea.

Catch

NIWA
Total allowable catch (TAC, metric tonnes) and catch taken for each year of the Ross Sea toothfish fishery.

Sea ice influences on the fishery

Fenaughty and Parker, 2015
Relative index of the amount of the potential fishing grounds that were clear of sea ice in Subarea 88.1 in each year.

Ross Sea mean sea ice concentration

Ross Sea mean sea ice concentration

This video shows mean sea ice concentration in Small Scale Research Units (SSRUs) 88.1H, 88.1I and 88.1K (red polygons) for the 2001-2002 fishing season. Sea ice concentrations are shown as open water (0, blue) to 1 (100% ice coverage, white). Each pixel shows the mean value for that cell for the period shown and the mean value for all pixels within each polygon is shown in the box at the bottom of the image. Sea ice concentration contours are shown as the proportion covered. SSRU boundaries and the 1,000 m depth contour are visible in the background of the image. [NIWA]

NIWA
The fishery starts on 1 December and continues until the catch limit has been caught. It is typically completed by the end of January and is influenced by sea ice contraints on access to preferred fishing areas, and the number of vessels participating. For each year the plot shows the proportion of fishing events per day. The middle day of the fished season is indicated by the horizontal line.
NIWA
The relative trend in standardised catch rate (black dots, scaled to have a mean of one) for each area in the Ross Sea fishery shows no change with time. Blue dashed lines show a smoothed fit and confidence intervals (grey area).
NIWA
The median (most common size) and the 90th percentile length show large variation among years (driven by the proportions of small fish present). However, there is a consistent trend arising on the north of decreasing size. The north is where one would expect to see this trend as juveniles typically do not occur there, and therefore changes in proportion are not influenced by variation in the presence of small fish. Some of this signal may be due to a small change in sex ratio, as males and females tend to be difference sizes. Black dots and lines show observed values, blue lines show the trend.

Fishery operational requirements

There are many regulatory requirements for fishing vessels operating under the auspices of CCAMLR in the region. Below, you can see a few of these, specifically related to the operations of vessels during the fishery. More information is available on the CCAMLR website.

Catch limits: Catch limits are set by CCAMLR, typically for two-year periods. The fishery currently opens on 1 December and typically closes by the end of January.

VMS: Vessels are required to be monitored with an electronic vessel monitoring system to track location.

Catch and effort reporting: Daily catch is reported to CCAMLR and CCAMLR issues a closure notice as the catch limit is approached.

Observer coverage: Each vessel is required to carry two scientific observers, one from the country authorizing the vessel, and one international observer.

Tagging: Vessels are required to tag fish at a rate of 1 fish per ton of toothfish catch. In addition, the size distribution of the tagged fish must match the size distribution of the catch.

Move-on rules: Vessels must stop fishing in an area and move to a new location if they catch above a threshold level of bycatch of macrourids (rattails) or habitat-forming invertebrates (corals and sponges characteristic of vulnerable marine ecosystems (termed VMEs).

Bycatch limits: Bycatch limits are in place for macrourids, skates, and the combined total of all other minor bycatch species.

Catch documentation scheme: Vessels taking fish from toothfish fisheries authorised by CCAMLR participate in a catch documentation scheme to track fish from the source fishery to the fish distributors.

Read more about the catch documentation scheme