NERP TE Project 6.2 Drivers of juvenile shark biodiversity and abundance in inshore ecosystems of the Great Barrier Reef (JCU)
Sharks play an important role in marine ecosystems but are facing increasing pressure from fishing and other anthropogenic factors. Along the Queensland coast inshore waters play an important role as nursery areas for sharks. However, the same inshore waters are also most prone to fisheries exploitation and effects of freshwater discharge from coastal streams and rivers. This project will examine the importance of different types of inshore habitat (protected bay vs. open coastline) and marine park zoning (open and closed to fishing), and how environmental factors such as freshwater discharge from rivers effect how these nursery areas function. The project has two broad objectives:
A. Investigate the spatial and temporal changes in the biodiversity and abundance of sharks in inshore nursery areas along the central GBR coast.
B. Determine the effect of environmental drivers on inshore shark biodiversity along the central GBR coast.
Results from the project will be used to improve the information available to fisheries and marine park managers on the relative importance of inshore habitats, the role of areas closed to fishing, and the sustainability of inshore shark populations.
Simple
Identification info
- Date (Creation)
- 2011-07-01T00:00:00
- Purpose
- Sharks are facing increasing threats from fishing and other human activities. Inshore areas, which are important nursery areas for sharks, are also popular for fishing and are influenced by freshwater discharge from coastal streams and rivers. If shark populations are going to be sustainably managed into the future, a better understanding of the impact of these pressures on juvenile sharks and critical nursery habitats is required.
- Credit
- Prof. Colin Simpfendorfer (JCU), Dr Andrew Tobin (JCU), Dr Michelle Heupel (AIMS), Mr Steve Moore (JCU), Dr (Richard Saunders), Mr Peter Yates (JCU), Ms Samantha Munroe (JCU), Ms Audrey Schlaff (JCU)
Principal investigator
Simpfendorfer, Colin, Prof.School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University (JCU)
Collaborator
Tobin, Andrew, DrSchool of Earth and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University (JCU)
- Topic category
-
- Biota
Extent
Extent
- Description
- NERP Project extent
Temporal extent
- Time period
- 2011-07-01 2014-12-31
- Keywords (Theme)
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- marine
- Language
- English
- Character encoding
- UTF8
Distribution Information
- Distribution format
-
- Reports, published papers and datasets
- OnLine resource
- Project web site
- OnLine resource
- QLD_NERP-TE_e-Atlas_Study-area:Project-6-2_2013_Polygons
Metadata
- Metadata identifier
- cb0f7df5-ffb0-45a7-a384-adec023f22f7
- Language
- English
- Character encoding
- UTF8
Point of contact
eAtlas Data ManagerAustralian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS)
- Parent metadata
Type of resource
- Resource scope
- Field session
- Name
- NERP TE Project
- Metadata linkage
-
https://eatlas.org.au/data/uuid/cb0f7df5-ffb0-45a7-a384-adec023f22f7
Point of truth URL of this metadata record
- Date info (Creation)
- 2015-12-10T15:03:37
- Date info (Revision)
- 2015-12-10T15:03:37
Metadata standard
- Title
- ISO 19115-3:2018