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Search and destroy: a bioeconomic analysis of orange roughy fisheries on seamounts in New Zealand

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dc.contributor.author Kahui, Viktoria
dc.contributor.author Armstrong, Claire W.
dc.date.copyright 2012-01
dc.identifier.citation Kahui, V., & Armstrong, C. W. (2012). Search and destroy: a bioeconomic analysis of orange roughy fisheries on seamounts in New Zealand (Economics Discussion Papers Series No. 1201). University of Otago. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2337 en
dc.identifier.issn 1178-2293
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2337
dc.description.abstract This paper develops a bioeconomic model that captures the underlying incentives driving the serial depletion of pristine seamounts. The determinants under New Zealand’s Quota Management System relate to unit cost savings from bottom trawling for orange roughy on seamounts, where catch rates are high, for a constrained yearly catch, yielding superior rent and driving the continued search for pristine seamounts. Despite known patterns of seamount depletion, catch and effort data collected by the New Zealand Ministry of Fisheries lack information on the bathymetry of harvesting locations. We provide descriptive statistics of the Ministry’s data on catch, effort and location between 2001 and 2010, which examine associations between high catch rates and pristine seamounts. The bioeconomic model formalises the expected gains of unit cost reductions and shows that bottom trawling activity on pristine seamounts ceases only when the expected reduction in harvest costs is equal to the search cost per unit of harvest. We contend that New Zealand’s policies to date to protect seamounts do not address the spatial determinants of rent appropriation under the quota system and that the imposition of a ‘seamount’ fee levied on the bottom trawlers’ harvest activities may provide a way to internalise the cost of seamount destruction more effectively. Such a policy has a number of advantages, the most important of which is that the fee ties the impacts of habitat destruction to the choice of fishing method, thereby providing an impetus to develop and adopt more selective fishing practices. en_NZ
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en en_NZ
dc.publisher University of Otago en_NZ
dc.relation.ispartofseries Economics Discussion Papers Series en_NZ
dc.relation.uri http://www.business.otago.ac.nz/econ/research/discussionpapers/index.html en_NZ
dc.subject orange roughy en_NZ
dc.subject seamount en_NZ
dc.subject bioeconomic model en_NZ
dc.subject policy en_NZ
dc.title Search and destroy: a bioeconomic analysis of orange roughy fisheries on seamounts in New Zealand en_NZ
dc.type Discussion Paper en_NZ
otago.school Department of Economics en_NZ
otago.openaccess Open en_NZ
otago.relation.number 1201 en_NZ

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