*

Giant Crab (2020)

Pseudocarcinus gigas

  • Klass Hartmann (Institute of Maine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania)
  • David Reilly (Victorian Fisheries Authority)
  • Jason How (Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development, Western Australia)
  • Lachlan McLeay (South Australian Research and Development Institute)

Date Published: June 2021

You are currently viewing a report filtered by jurisdiction. View the full report.

Toggle content

Summary

Giant Crab occurs from WA to TAS but it is considered a single biological stock. Nevertheless, stocks are classified separately for the four states. Stock is sustainable in WA, SA and VIC, and depleted in TAS.

Toggle content

Stock Status Overview

Stock status determination
Jurisdiction Stock Stock status Indicators
Western Australia Western Australia Sustainable CPUE, catch, effort, proportion of habitat unexploited
Toggle content

Stock Structure

Giant Crab is considered to be a single biological stock from Western Australia to Tasmania because the species is continuously distributed across this range. Planktonic larval duration is around 50 days, with larval release occurring along the edge of the continental shelf. The shelf is a high current area, facilitating dispersal, and oceanographic modelling has indicated that Giant Crab dispersal occurs over large spatial scales [Gardner 1998, Gardner and Quintana 1998, Williams et. al. 2009].

Status of Australian Fish Stocks reports on Giant Crab up to 2016 provided an overall assessment for this assumed biological stock. However, there have been significant changes in the relative performance of the various fisheries operating across this stock since 2014. New information indicates that Giant Crab are now considered to be depleted in Tasmania but sustainable in Western Australia. It is difficult to reconcile these differences in regional depletion levels under an assumption of a single stock. But management arrangements also vary across jurisdictions and the fishing fleets in each jurisdiction consist of vessels with different characteristics, resulting in different patterns of exploitation.

Assessment of stock status is presented here at the jurisdictional levelWestern Australia and South Australia; and the management unit levelGiant Crab Fishery (Victoria) and Giant Crab Fishery (Tasmania).

Toggle content

Stock Status

Western Australia

Limited data are available for Giant Crab targeted fishing in Western Australia, with catches being generally either a byproduct of Southern Rock Lobster fishing, or as part of a combined catch of other deep sea crabs. Recently, logbook data have become available to provide limited data on targeted Giant Crab catches. Catches of Giant Crabs in Western Australia fluctuated, increasing from 4.8 t in 2009–10 to 14.6 t 2012–13, before generally remaining around ~10 t from the 2014–15 to 2019–20 seasons.  With current landings coming from across a wide geographic range, when compared to the other jurisdictions, there are large portions of the stock in Western Australia (particularly east of longitude 125°E) that are not being exploited. The above evidence indicates that the biomass of this stock is unlikely to be depleted, that locally-sourced recruitment is unlikely to be impaired, and that the current level of fishing pressure is unlikely to cause the stock to become recruitment impaired.

On the basis of the evidence presented above, Giant Crab in Western Australia is classified as a sustainable stock.

Toggle content

Biology

Giant Crab biology [Gardner 1998, McGarvey et. al. 1999, Williams et. al. 2009,]

Biology
Species Longevity / Maximum Size Maturity (50 per cent)
Giant Crab ≥ 30 years, > 200 mm CL , ~10 kg 125–140 mm CL, depending on region
Toggle content

Distributions

Distribution of reported commercial catch of Giant Crab
Toggle content

Tables

Fishing methods
Western Australia
Commercial
Traps and Pots
Indigenous
Unspecified
Traps and Pots
Recreational
Unspecified
Traps and Pots
Management methods
Method Western Australia
Commercial
Limited entry
Quota
Size limit
Spatial closures
Temporal closures
Indigenous
Size limit
Temporal closures
Recreational
Size limit
Temporal closures
Catch
Western Australia
Commercial 9.28t
Indigenous Zero
Recreational Negligible

South Australian data are from quota holders in the 2016–17 fishing season (October 2016–May 2017), Victorian data are for the 2016–17 fishing season (November 2016–September 2017), Tasmanian data are for the 2017-18 fishing season (March 2017 – February 2018) and South Coast  Crustacean Managed Fishery (Western Australia) data are for the 2019–20 financial year. 

 

Victoria – Indigenous (Management Methods) A person who identifies as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander is exempt from the need to obtain a Victorian recreational fishing licence, provided they comply with all other rules that apply to recreational fishers, including rules on equipment, catch limits, size limits and restricted areas. Traditional (non-commercial) fishing activities that are carried out by members of a traditional owner group entity under an agreement pursuant to Victoria’s Traditional Owner Settlement Act 2010 are also exempt from the need to hold a recreational fishing licence, subject to any conditions outlined in the agreement. Native title holders are also exempt from the need to obtain a recreational fishing licence under the provisions of the Commonwealth’s Native Title Act 1993.

Toggle content

Catch Chart

Commercial catch of Giant Crab - note confidential catch not shown
Toggle content

References

  1. Emery, T, Hartmann K and Gardner C, 2015, Giant Crab stock assessment report 2013/14, IMAS, Hobart.
  2. Fisheries Victoria 2010, Giant Crab Management Plan, Second Edition, ISBN 978-1-74264-478-3.
  3. Fogarty, MJ and Gendron, L 2004, Biological reference points for American lobster (Homarus americanus) populations: limits to exploitation and the precautionary approach, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 61(8): 1392–1403.
  4. Gardner, C 1998, First record of larvae of the Giant Crab Pseudocarcinus gigas in the plankton, Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania, 132: 47–48.
  5. Gardner, C and Quintana R 1998, Larval development of the Australian Giant Crab Pseudocarcinus gigas (Lamarck, 1818) (Decapoda: Oziidae) reared in the laboratory, Journal of Plankton Research, 20(6): 1169–1188.
  6. Gardner, C, Haddon, M, Hobday,D and McGarvey R 2007, Development of the tools for long term management of the Giant Crab resource: data collection methodology, stock assessment and harvest strategy evaluation, final report to the Fisheries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra.
  7. McGarvey, R, Matthews, JM and Levings, AH 1999, Yield-, value-, and egg-per-recruit of Giant Crab, Pseudocarcinus gigas, South Australian Research and Development Institute, Adelaide.
  8. McLeay, L, 2020, Stock status report for the South Australian South Australian Giant Crab (Pseudocarcinus gigas) Fishery in 2018/19. Fishery Status Report to PIRSA Fisheries and Aquaculture. South Australian Research and Development Institute (Aquatic Sciences), Adelaide. SARDI Publication No. F2011/000332-9. SARDI Research Report Series No. 1050.
  9. PIRSA 2018, Management Policy for Commercial Fishing of Giant Crabs in South Australia. Primary Industries and Regions South Australia. Adelaide, Australia.
  10. VFA (2020) 2018/19 Victorian Giant Crab Stock Assessment. Victorian Fisheries Authority Report Series No.11
  11. Williams, A, Gardner, C, Althaus, F, Barker, B and Mills D 2009, Understanding shelf-break habitat for sustainable management of fisheries with spatial overlap, final report to the Fisheries Research and Development Corporation, project 2004/066, CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, Hobart.

Downloadable reports

Click the links below to view reports from other years for this fish.