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Dive into the research topics where Adrian Linnane is active.

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Featured researches published by Adrian Linnane.


New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research | 2005

Movement patterns of the southern rock lobster, Jasus edwardsii, off South Australia

Adrian Linnane; Wetjens F. Dimmlich; Tim M. Ward

Abstract Movement patterns of the southern rock lobster Jasus edwardsii were determined from 14 280 tag‐recapture events across South Australia between 1993 and 2003. In total, 68% of lobsters were recaptured within 1 km of their release site and 85% within 5 km. The proportion of lobsters moving >1 km in marine fishing areas (MFAs) ranged from 13% to 51%. Movement rates were noticeably high in the south‐east and at Gleesons Landing lobster sanctuary off the Yorke Peninsula but patterns of movement differed spatially. In the south‐east, lobsters moved distances of <20 km from inshore waters to nearby offshore reefs whereas at the Yorke Peninsula, individuals moved distances > 100 km from within the sanctuary to sites located on the north‐western coast of Kangaroo Island and the southern end of Eyre Peninsula. In total, 85% of all lobsters released inside the sanctuary moved distances >1 km. Movement was highest in immature females within most MFAs. Females also remained at large an average of 124 days longer than males. The high variation in lobster movement observed across South Australia highlights the need for locally derived, regionally specific data when assessing the proposed location and subsequent modelling of marine protected areas. This is of particular importance to inshore areas, where movement rates of lobsters were highest.


New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research | 2009

Colour variation in the southern rock lobster Jasus edwardsii and its economic impact on the commercial industry

Arani Chandrapavan; C Gardner; Adrian Linnane; David Hobday

Abstract Southern rock lobster Jasus edwardsii varies in shell coloration throughout southern Australia. Predominantly exported as a live product to Asian markets, price is influenced by colour with prices higher for dark red than paler coloured lobsters, which are discounted. This paper explores spatial and depth variation in shell colour for the Tasmanian, South Australian and Victorian fisheries using catch sampling data. The proportion of red lobsters decreased with depth and was prevalent at depths less than 30 m, whereas paler coloured lobsters dominated the deeper depth ranges. The depth of transition where 50% of lobsters were classified as red showed a weak trend of increase with latitude from southern Tasmania to northern South Australia. Under quota management, lobster colour was a significant driver of fleet dynamics as fishers target areas of high price per unit. Consequently, catches of pale lobsters from greater depths remain low despite the high catch rates in these areas. The colour price differential varies seasonally (higher in summer) so fishers increase supply of pale lobsters during winter. Discounting on colour equates to AUS


PLOS ONE | 2010

The Good, the Bad and the Recovery in an Assisted Migration

Bridget S. Green; C Gardner; Adrian Linnane; Peter Hawthorne

6.67 million/year for the Tasmanian Fishery alone, which indicates value from management or marketina research to reduce discountina.


Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries | 2014

Environmental effects on fished lobsters and crabs

Bridget S. Green; C Gardner; Jennifer D. Hochmuth; Adrian Linnane

Background Assisted migration or translocation of species to ameliorate effects of habitat loss or changing environment is currently under scrutiny as a conservation tool. A large scale experiment of assisted migration over hundreds of kilometres was tested on a morph from a commercial fishery of southern rock lobster Jasus edwardsii, to enhance depleted populations, improve the yield and sustainability of the fishery, and test resilience to a changing climate. Methodology and Principal Findings Approximately 10,000 lower-valued, pale-coloured lobsters were moved from deep water to inshore sites (2 in Tasmania [TAS] and 2 in South Australia [SA]) where the high-value, red morph occurs. In TAS this was a northwards movement of 1° latitude. Growth was measured only in TAS lobsters, and reproductive status was recorded in lobsters from all locations. Pale females (TAS) grew 4 times faster than resident pale lobsters from the original site and twice as fast as red lobsters at their new location. Approximately 30% of translocated pale lobsters deferred reproduction for one year after release (SA and TAS), and grew around 1 mm yr−1 less compared to translocated pale lobsters that did not defer reproduction. In spite of this stress response to translocation, females that deferred reproduction still grew 2–6 mm yr−1 more than lobsters at the source site. Lobsters have isometric growth whereby volume increases as a cube of length. Consequently despite the one-year hiatus in reproduction, increased growth increases fecundity of translocated lobsters, as the increase in size provided a larger volume for producing and incubating eggs in future years. Conclusions and Significance Assisted migration improved egg production and growth, despite a temporary stress response, and offers a tool to improve the production, sustainability and resilience of the fishery.


New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research | 2009

Spatial dynamics of the South Australian rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) fishery under a quota‐based system

Adrian Linnane; Kelly Crosthwaite

AbstractThe fisheries for crabs and lobsters (Reptantia, Decapoda) are shaped by environmental variation through the distribution ecology, productivity or even their market traits such as colour and size. Many crabs and lobsters have a wide latitudinal distribution and therefore are exposed to significant abiotic gradients throughout their geographic range. Environmental factors affect reptantians throughout their complex life cycle, including embryo development, timing and length of the spawning period, the duration and quality of the larval stages, the level and spatial distribution of the settlement, growth rates and size of the juveniles, size at maturity, and catchability. The most consistent environmental response is of growth and reproduction to temperature. Growth rates increase with increasing temperatures in a parabolic function, tapering and then declining as the boundaries of thermal tolerance are reached. With increasing temperature the intermoult duration decreases. Once the upper thermal boundary is reached, increases in temperature result in longer intermoult duration and smaller growth increments so that growth is reduced. Declines in temperature generally suppress moulting, and consequently reptantians rarely moult in winter. Increasing temperature decreases the time for egg incubation, larval development and the maturational age. Catchability increases with water temperature and also varies, although less predictably, with moon phase and wind strength. Catchability decreases with an increase in population density. Larval settlement of many reptantian species depends on current strength, increasing with the strength of certain local currents. Reptantians can tolerate a wide-variety of conditions and have flexible life-histories to respond to conditions throughout their broad geographic ranges. Information on environmental effects on reptantians not only assists in understanding probable effects of ocean warming and acidification, but also seasonal and interannual changes in fisheries production.


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2001

An overview of the LEAR (Lobster Ecology and Recruitment) project: results of field and experimental studies on the juvenile ecology of Homarus gammarus in cobble

John P. Mercer; R. Colin A. Bannister; Gro van der Meeren; Valerie Debuse; David Mazzoni; Steve Lovewell; Ronan Browne; Adrian Linnane; Brendan Ball

Abstract The southern rock lobster, Jasus edwardsii, is South Australias most valuable fisheries resource, with an annual landed value of c. AU


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2007

Two monitoring methods that assess species composition and spatio-temporal trends in bycatch from an important temperate rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) fishery

Daniel J. Brock; Peter Hawthorne; Tim M. Ward; Adrian Linnane

100 million. Approximately 80% of this revenue comes from the southern zone (SZ) rock lobster fishery, which has been managed under an individual transferable quota system since 1993. The total allowable commercial catch is currently set at 1900 tonnes. Long‐term spatial trends in catch and effort were analysed over the period 1970–2005 to investigate possible changes in the spatial dynamics of the fleets as a result of quota introduction. Data indicate that the fishery contracted into three main Marine Fishing Areas (MFAs) after 1993. In particular, the long‐term catch average in MFA 51 decreased from 185.4 tonnes pre‐quota to 59.8 tonnes post quota. This MFA is located in the northern region of the SZ and is one of the furthest MFAs from the main fishing ports in the region. The fishery is also spatially contracted within MFAs. Approximately 80% of the annual catch comes from <60m depth despite catch rates being 2–3 times greater in offshore sites as evidenced from both fishery‐dependent and independent sources. Such trends appear driven by recent market preferences that select for small (<1 kg), red‐coloured lobster that are primarily located on inshore grounds. As a result, fishers now target inshore sites to maximise returns under the quota‐based system. The observed shift in the spatial dynamics of the SZ has clear implications for the biological performance indicators on which the fishery is managed. Specifically, the results highlight the need for a fishery‐independent assessment of the resource that provides estimates of catch rate and biomass independent of current harvest strategies. Preliminary results from a trial survey undertaken in 2005/06 and 2006/07 show higher lobster abundance in lowly exploited offshore sites compared with inshore areas. These trends highlight the need for refined spatial management of the resource, which is the focus of the new management plan for the fishery.


Marine Biology Research | 2013

The importance of conserving recruitment pulses in rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) fisheries where puerulus settlement is low or highly sporadic

Adrian Linnane; Richard McGarvey; Matthew Hoare; Peter Hawthorne

Field and experimental studies were undertaken in four European countries on clawed lobster (Homarus gammarus) ecology and recruitment. The aims were to assess: (a) abundance of early benthic phase (EBP) lobsters and other benthic species at cobble sites, (b) the effect of these species on EBP growth and survival, and (c) influence of these factors on recruitment and/or viability of restocking. Suction sampling of cobble sites revealed a wide diversity and abundance of potential competitors but no EBP lobsters. Hatchery-produced EBPs were therefore used for small-scale mesocosm experiments. In nature, predation on EBP was rapid without shelter, whereas in-vitro mortality, growth, and behaviour experiments showed that cover potentially increases survival. Scarcity per se may not completely explain the apparently absence of EBP, given that not a single EBP lobster was located either during this study or during any other of the extensive benthic investigations. The present paper discusses the implications of their apparent absence and whether it arises because EBPs are very scarce, cannot be captured by suction sampling, are not within lobster habitat, or occupy a specialized niche within adult habitat outside the range of current sampling methods.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Predation Risk within Fishing Gear and Implications for South Australian Rock Lobster Fisheries

Felipe Briceño; Adrian Linnane; Juan Carlos Quiroz; C Gardner; Gt Pecl

The effectiveness of two monitoring programs, designed to describe and quantify the bycatch from commercial pots, was examined in the South Australian rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) fishery (SARLF). The first, logbook sampling, relied on information collected and recorded by fishers in logbooks. The second, bycatch sampling, required fishers to collect bycatch specimens on a nominated day for later scientific analysis. A total of 40 bycatch species were recorded during the study. Finfish, mainly blue-throat wrasse (Notolabrus tetricus) and leather jacket species (Meuschenia hippocrepis and Meushenia australis), were the major component (>90% by number). Data from the logbook program were appropriate for monitoring spatio-temporal trends in bycatch, whereas the bycatch sampling provided more accurate information on bycatch species. Each program was subject to bias when estimating total bycatch numbers and, as a result, a combination of both methods indicated a cost-effective and appropriate way with which to monitor bycatch from the fishery. In comparison with other fisheries, bycatch from the SARLF was relatively low; however, because bycatch was dominated by relatively few species, ongoing monitoring and risk assessment of these populations is needed to ensure long-term sustainability of bycatch levels.


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2016

Decision rules for quota setting to support spatial management in a lobster (Jasus edwardsii) fishery

Richard McGarvey; Adrian Linnane; Janet M. Matthews; Annabel Jones

Abstract The commercial fishery for southern rock lobster (Jasus edwardsii) is South Australias most valuable fishery resource worth in excess of AUS

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C Gardner

University of Tasmania

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Richard McGarvey

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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André E. Punt

University of Washington

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John E. Feenstra

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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Peter Hawthorne

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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Janet M. Matthews

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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Matthew Hoare

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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Tim M. Ward

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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