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Marine and Freshwater Research Marine and Freshwater Research Society
Advances in the aquatic sciences
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Response of barramundi, Lates calcarifer, populations in the Fly River, Papua New Guinea to mining, fishing and climate-related perturbation

David Milton A C , Markson Yarrao B , Gary Fry A and Charles Tenakanai B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, PO Box 120, Cleveland, Qld 4163, Australia.

B Environment Department, Ok Tedi Mining Ltd, PO Box 1, Tabubil, Western Province, Papua New Guinea.

C Corresponding author. Email: david.milton@csiro.au

Marine and Freshwater Research 56(7) 969-981 https://doi.org/10.1071/MF04278
Submitted: 24 November 2004  Accepted: 2 June 2005   Published: 14 October 2005

Abstract

Migrating barramundi (Perciformes : Centropomidae) spawners support a valuable artisanal fishery on the coast of south-western Papua New Guinea. This fishery declined dramatically during the 1990s shortly after the large Ok Tedi copper mine began in the headwaters of the large Fly River nearby. In order to understand the factors causing the decline, populations were sampled quarterly with gill-nets at over 20 sites throughout the Fly River from 1987 to 2001. Barramundi were most abundant in the middle and upper reaches of the Fly River. No evidence was found that output from the large Ok Tedi mine was negatively impacting on barramundi catch rates. However, the commercial fishery in the middle Fly River was found to have a negative impact on the weight of barramundi in monitoring catches in that region. Additionally, catch rates of juvenile barramundi (1 year olds) in the Fly River were negatively correlated with the amount of rainfall on the breeding grounds during the previous monsoon. This suggests that the reduced catch rates in the coastal commercial fishery in the late 1980s and early 1990s may have been affected by both the riverine commercial fishery and the El Niño (ENSO) that occurred at that time.

Extra keywords: El Niño, fishing, mining, population monitoring, Southern Oscillation Index.


Acknowledgments

We thank Ok Tedi Mining Ltd Biology Section staff who participated in the fieldwork, especially Kayemen Bakowa, Boga Figa, Philip Atio and Mosely Teko. Drs Yimin Ye and Tim Davis, and two anonymous referees provided constructive comments on earlier drafts of the manuscript. This study was partly funded by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (FIS 98/24), CSIRO and Ok Tedi Mining Ltd.


References

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