Fishing for squid

FCVs are used commonly when fishing for squid, a catch that varies in value depending on what’s happening in the global market.

Although squid is traditionally a low value product, New Zealand’s squid fishery is one of our most economically important industries. It is frequently one of our top seafood export earners, with most of our product exported to Asia and Spain.

The value of our squid fishery is heavily influenced by how much squid is caught in other parts of the world, particularly in the South Atlantic. The size and quality of the available squid also plays a part in how much the market will pay. This, along with fluctuations in exchange rates, explains why export earnings can vary from year to year.

Export Earnings

The main squid fishing season occurs during the summer months. There are two trawl fishing areas – a small area around the Auckland and Campbell Islands known as SQU6T and an area covering the rest of the EEZ called SQU1T.

Squid

The SQU1T fishery is primarily a trawl fishery and normally begins in December. The SQU6T fishery starts on 1 February and normally continues until the end of April. There is also a smaller squid jig fishery, covering the same area as SQU1T. Jig fishing uses a different fishing method than trawl vessels – but few boats are involved in this fishery at present.

Both of New Zealand’s squid fisheries are fished mainly by Korean and Ukrainian vessels that have been chartered by New Zealand companies. This is because it costs less to charter a vessel than it does to buy a new one.

The squid fishery is unusual because squid are believed to spawn (releasing and fertilizing eggs) and die in the same year, so with each new fishing year there is essentially a fresh quantity of squid to harvest. This means that the effect of fishing on the squid species may be relatively small, as long as sufficient spawning takes place. There are environmental issues in both the SQU1T and SQU6T fishery. Sea lions are at risk in the SQU6T fishery. Like other fisheries, seabirds are also at risk of being caught and killed.

In the past the SQU1T fishery has had the highest number of seabird captures across all New Zealand’s fisheries. In recent years both regulations and voluntary measures, brought in by the industry, have been introduced to reduce the high number of seabird captures. Regulatory measures include that all vessels must use a bird scaring device.

Current voluntary measures require fishers to limit the amount of offal that is discharged from their vessel. Offal is waste from onboard fish processing, such as gutting and filleting. Seabirds are attracted to it because it is a good food source for them. The SQU6T fishery around the Auckland and Campbell Islands overlaps the habitat of the New Zealand sea lion. Sea lions sometimes get caught in squid fishing gear and drown.

To address this the Minister sets a sea lion mortality limit which specifies the maximum number of sea lions that can be captured in the SQU6T fishery. When this limit is reached the fishery is closed. For the 2007/08 season the limit was 81 sea lions.

There were 46 assumed sea lion deaths during this period, 10 fewer than the previous year. In recent years fishing gear has been developed that allows sea lions to escape from fishing nets. All vessels fishing in SQU6T use this gear and MFish believes the number of sea lion captures has fallen as a result.

To understand how sea lions interact with fishing gear, some fishing boats had cameras attached to their nets during the 2008 season. This footage will be used to ensure that government and the fishing industry are doing everything possible to limit the impacts on sea lions, while still permitting fishers access to this important fishery.

Updated : 31 July 2008