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Fish!


Snapper: everyone's favourite fish

Preview
Snapper is a popular fish, prized by Maori, commercial and recreational fishers alike. However, the resource has been overfished to the extent that by the early 1980's its future was in doubt. However overall, the decline in snapper fisheries appears to have been halted, but in some areas, for example the Hauraki Gulf, snapper are still under pressure. There are now management plans in place to allow the stocks to increase.

Vital statistics

Commercial importance

Traditional Maori fishing

Recreational fishers

Commercial fishers

Fisheries

snapper photo

Vital statistics

Distribution, habitat and fisheries

Food

Age, growth and mortality

Distribution, habitat and fisheries
Snapper mostly live in shallow water (10-50 metres), although they are also found down to depths of 200 metres on the continental shelf of the North Island and northern South Island. There are at least six separate stocks. Fish on the east coast grow more slowly and are generally smaller than those on the west coast and in Tasman Bay/Golden Bay.

Coastal areas with a clear ocean floor are home to most snapper. But snapper can also be found near rock bottom areas, in harbours, bays, around offshore islands, and sometimes a moderate distance offshore.

diagram of main snapper fisheries in New Zealand
click map for larger version

Generally snapper populations contain individual fish of widely varying age. However, young snapper tend to swim in schools of the same size and year group, while older snapper often live alone.

Snapper movements are not well understood. Some young school snapper migrate hundreds of kilometres, whereas others stay in the same area. Main movements seem to be seasonal. Adults move to spawning grounds in spring, and inshore to feed in late summer. Some fish move offshore to warmer water in winter.

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Food
Snapper are carnivores. Small snapper feed mainly on small crustaceans and worms. Larger snapper eat fish and larger, harder-bodied animals such as sea eggs (kina), crabs and shellfish. Snapper are very adaptable and if one type of prey becomes scarce they can change their eating habits.

Age, growth and mortality
Snapper are relatively long-lived and slow growing. They have been known to live to at least 60, grow to a length of 100 cm and weigh 17 kg or more.

In the Hauraki Gulf, where most research on snapper has been done, snapper reach sexual maturity at three to five years of age when they are 22-30cm long. They breed between October and February, depending on the water temperature. Each fish may spawn daily over extended periods, releasing up to 100,000 eggs each time.

chart of 2yr old snapper quantities vs mean water twmperatures
click graph for larger version

Spawning success is less related to the number of parent fish than to conditions at spawning time and during the months following. Warm summer to autumn temperatures appear to allow a greater survival of eggs, larvae and juveniles. After a series of warm years the fishable stock will increase, with a time lag of four to five years (the time from spawning to full recruitment as adults). After cool years the stock level will decline.

The eggs (which hatch in 1-2 days) and the larvae are very vulnerable and the mortality rate can be 90 percent or more. Young fish may also have a high mortality rate during their first few years but older fish have a mortality rate of about 10 - 15 percent per year, mainly due to fishing and natural causes.
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Commercial importance
Commercially, snapper is one of New Zealand's most important fish. It has been fished heavily for years, and as a result, stocks in several areas are considered to be below their most productive levels.

Snapper is New Zealand's most valuable coastal fish species. In addition to local sales, about $50 million worth of snapper was exported each year in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In the late 1990's this fell to around $40 million.

The main market for snapper is Japan, which mostly takes chilled whole fish, and an increasing amount of live snapper. High prices for iki jime (literally meaning "stab death") fish are fetched, which requires live fish to be killed by a spike driven through the brain. Australia is also an important market for snapper.

The snapper fishery has been controlled by a range of regulations, including:

limited licensing (until 1963)

closed areas and seasons

a minimum size limit

mesh size limits for nets

an annual quota in some areas from the late 1970s

a controlled fishery in the Hauraki Gulf from 1983 to 1986.
photo - pile of snapper
None of these methods managed to stop overfishing. Concern about overfishing was one of the reasons behind the introduction of the Quota Management System.
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Traditional Maori fishing
Snapper (tamure) are very important to Maori in northern New Zealand. They form part of their oral tradition and there are large deposits of snapper bones in the middens of prehistoric fishing camps.

traditional maori fishing hook cartoonIn the early 1980s there was a New Zealand-wide moratorium on new entrants to the commercial fishery, followed by removing licences from part-time fishers. These measures had an impact on northern Maori fishers.

The situation was made more difficult for some Maori Fishers in 1986, when the Quota Management System gave quota to full-time fishers on the basis of their catch history. Some of these fishers did not live in the Northland area, but travelled there to catch fish from Auckland or Tauranga.

Fishers without permits missed out on quota. This was one of the reasons why Maori lodged the Muriwhenua claim for control over fisheries north of Doubtless Bay.
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Recreational fishers
Snapper are highly valued by recreational fishers. Surveys in 1991 - 1994 and again in 1996 estimated that about 3,500 tonnes of snapper are caught annually by recreational fishers.

Recreational fishers use lines, beach seines and set nets on a small scale. The proportion of total snapper taken by recreational fishers varies between 10 and 40 percent.

Commercial fishers
Commercial fishers use longlines, beach seines and set nets, Danish seiners and trawlers. Purse seiners are now banned for snapper.

Fisheriesphoto - pile of snapper 2
There are four major and two smaller snapper fisheries. The four major fisheries are: the Hauraki Gulf, eastern Northland, Bay of Plenty and the west coast of the North Island. The smaller fisheries are East Cape/Hawke's Bay, Tasman Bay and Marlborough Sounds.

The Hauraki Gulf
The Hauraki Gulf is the largest snapper fishery for both recreational and commercial fishers. Recreational fishers, including charter boats catch many fish but this is allowed for under the Total Allowable Catch (TAC). In 1992 the amateur bag limit was reduced from 30 to 20 a day.

Snapper landings into Gulf ports have ranged from 3,000 tonnes to 8,000 tonnes, about two-thirds of this coming from the Gulf itself. The landings peaked at 8,400 tonnes in 1971, but declined to 3,400 tonnes in 1986.

When the Quota Management System was introduced in 1986, the snapper TAC in Zone 1 (which combines eastern Northland, the Hauraki Gulf and Bay of Plenty) was set at 4,700 tonnes to allow the fishery to rebuild. Many fishers made successful appeals to the Quota Appeal Authority. By 1991, the Total Allowable Commercial Catch (TACC) had risen to more than 6,000 tonnes.

The total fishing pressure was considered too high to allow the stock to rebuild, and in 1992, in an effort to address this problem, the TACC was reduced to 4,900 tonnes. A further reduction to 4,500 tonnes was made in 1997.

For more information click on any link below.

 

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