|
New
Zealand's Quota Management System (QMS) was introduced to monitor
fish stocks and annual catches to ensure that New Zealand's fish
resources are sustainably utilised. The QMS is widely regarded as
one of the leading fish management tools in the world.
Each
year the Minister of Fisheries states what quantity of each quota
species may be caught. Decisions are based on information supplied
by the Ministry of Fisheries and other interested groups such as
the commercial fishing industry, recreational fishers, Mäori
and conservation groups.
Fishing
levels are worked out using the concept of maximum sustainable yield,
which is the largest average annual catch that can be taken over
time without reducing the stock's productive potential.
The
quantity of shellfish that can be taken for each shellfish stock,
by both commercial and noncommercial fishers, is the Total Allowable
Catch (TAC). A TAC makes an allowance for recreational fishing and
customary Mäori uses. The remainder is then available to the
commercial sector as the Total Allowable Commercial Catch (TACC),
which defines the total quantity of each shellfish stock that the
commercial fishing industry can catch that year.
Under
the Mäori Fisheries Act 2004 and Treaty of Waitangi (Fisheries
Claims) Settlement Act 1992, Mäori are allocated 10 percent
of the TACC for päua. The black-footed and yellow-footed päua
have been managed under the QMS since 1987 as one stock in eight
quota management areas. On 1 October 1995, the Southland area was
subdivided into three quota management areas: Fiordland, Stewart
Island, and Otago/Southland.
Information sourced from Statistics New Zealand. www.stats.govt.nz
|