- Fisheries Management in New Zealand
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- Aotea Great Barrier Temporary Closure 2023
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- Coromandel East temporary closure 2024
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- Ōmāui Mātaitai 2019-20
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- Taranaki temporary closure 2022
- Tautuku Mātaitai 2019-21
- Te Māta temporary closure
- Tutukaka – Ngunguru temporary closure 2023
- Umupuia temporary closure
- Waiheke temporary closure 2021-24
- Waimārama temporary closure 2024
- Waimārama temporary closure 2020 -22
- Whale Island mātaitai 2024
- Whangaroa temporary closure 2021
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- Aggregation limits application 2024
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- Aggregation limits application 2024
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- Coromandel East temporary closure 2024
- Crayfish 3 TAC review 2024
- Crayfish 7 and 8 review 2024
- Exception review for predated HMS 2024
- Extend coastal permits bill 2024
- Fast Track Approvals Bill 2024
- Hauraki Gulf temporary closures 2024
- Jack mackerel pilchard kingfish review 2024
- Kaikōura Pāua 3A TAC review 2024
- Kaikōura pāua reopening 2024
- Kina 1 review 2024
- Kina 3 TAC review 2024
- Kingfish 3 TAC review 2024
- Ōhiwa Harbour temporary closure 2024
- Pacific bluefin landing review 2024
- Ruapuke Island Mātaitai 2024
- Snapper flatfish elephantfish 7 review 2024
- Snapper Rig John dory 2 review 2024
- Snapper 8 TAC review 2024
- Southern bluefin landing review 2024
- Southern bluefin TAC review 2024
- Taranaki temporary closure 2024
- Waikato Regional Coastal Plan 2022-24
- Waimārama temporary closure 2024
- Whale Island mātaitai 2024
- 2023 submissions
- Aotea Great Barrier Temporary Closure 2023
- Coromandel scallop closure review 2023
- Crayfish 1 TAC review 2023
- Deemed values review SNA 2023
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- Hauraki Gulf trawl corridors 2023
- Kina 1 TAC review 2023
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- Hāpuku Bass 7 & 8 TAC Review 2022/23
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- Northland area closure proposals 2022
- Pāua 5 Draft Fisheries Plan
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- Northland & Coromandel Scallop TAC Review 2022
- Tarakihi east coast TAC review 2022
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- Umupuia temporary closure 2008-2024
- 2021 submissions
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- Cameras on boats 2021
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- Crayfish 1, 3, 4, 5 & Packhorse TAC review 2021
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- Flatfish 2 TAC review 2021
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- Kingfish 8 Deemed value review 2021
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- Tarakihi east coast TAC review 2021
- Waiheke temporary closure 2021-24
- Whangaroa temporary closure 2021
- Yellow-eyed mullet 9 TAC review 2021
- 2020 submissions
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- Blue cod 5 TAC review 2020
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- Kingfish 2, 3, 7 & 8 TAC review. July 2020
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- Te Māta temporary closure
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Kingfish monitoring
Introduction
Kingfish are a popular and challenging target species for many recreational fishers. They form a valuable component of the charter boat business with clients coming from around New Zealand and the world to test their angling skills against these hard fighting fish. Now there is growing demand for guided fly fishing trips sight fishing for kingfish in shallow water.
In New Zealand most popular fish stocks are monitored using commercial catch history and catch rates. However, most of commercial catch of kingfish is taken as small component of longline, trawl and setnet fishing targeting other species. Kingfish is in the unique position of having a higher documented recreational landed catch (around 740 tonnes a year nationwide) than annual commercial landed catch (around 250 tonnes).
Only the recreational fishery targets kingfish and catches the full size range available. NIWA investigated the options for monitoring kingfish stocks and as a result the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) funded projects to monitor the size and age structure of the charter boat kingfish catch in north eastern New Zealand every five years.
Catch sampling
In 2009–10 a total of 2091 kingfish were measured aboard charter and selected private boats and 460 were aged. All fish were assigned an age based on their length. East Northland had a lot of five year old fish and very few teenagers. In the Bay of Plenty six year olds formed the largest age class and there were more older fish. The oldest fish aged was a 170 cm fish caught at White Island which was 24 years old. The oldest and largest fish sampled in East Northland was a 156 cm fish (41.6 kg) caught in Bream Bay aged at 22 years.
The estimates of fishing mortality that year lead MPI to conclude that kingfish in the Bay of Plenty where fully exploited and over fishing was occurring in East Northland. The 2010 NZSFC club records howerver, showed increasing availability and catch of mid-sized kingfish from 80 to 105 cm, probably from good spawning success in 2004 and 2005. This pulse of fish could be the start of the stock rebuild we were all hoping for after the management decisions in 2003.
Thanks to the cooperation of the Bay of Islands Swordfish Club and anglers in the Yellowtail International Tournament, researchers have been able to measure a good number of kingfish in July each year since 2010. Annual updates provided to the club and tournament fishers about this monitoring work features below.
The project estimating the size and age of kingfish in north eastern New Zealand was repeated in 2014-15 and a link to the full report is below.
Commercial kingfish catch
Warming ocean waters, particularly in the Tasman Sea in recent years, have seen an increase in trawl bycatch of kingfish on the west coast of the North Island and the top of the South Island.
Commercial catch rate data has been analysed and increases in the Total Allowable Catch have been proposed in 2020. Read more here.
Kingfish monitoring reports
Reports
Kingfish monitoring report. June 2019
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring report including results from the 2018 Bay of Islands yellowtail tournament catch sampling. June 2019
Kingfish monitoring report. June 2018
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring report including results from the Bay of Islands yellowtail tournament 2010 to 2017. June 2018
Kingfish monitoring report. June 2017
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring report including results from the Bay of Islands yellowtail tournament 2010 to 2016. June 2017
Report. Kingfish catch at age data. MPI. Aug 2016
Report. Catch at age of yellowtail kingfish caught by NZ recreational fishers in 2014-15. MPI. August 2016.
Kingfish monitoring report. June 2016
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring report including results from the Bay of Islands yellowtail tournament 2010 to 2015. June 2016.
Kingfish monitoring report. June 2015
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring report including results from the Bay of Islands yellowtail tournament 2010 to 2014. June 2015.
Kingfish gamefish tagging data 1975 – 2014. GTP. 2014
Report. Synthesis of New Zealand Gamefish Tagging Data for yellowtail kingfish. 1975 to 2014. Gamefish Tagging Programme. 2014.
Kingfish monitoring report. June 2014
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring report including results from the Bay of Islands yellowtail tournament 2010 to 2014. June 2014.
Kingfish monitoring report. June 2013
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring report including results from the Bay of Islands yellowtail tournament 2010 to 2013. June 2013.
Kingfish monitoring report. June 2012
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring report including results from the Bay of Islands yellowtail tournament 2010 to 2012. June 2012.
Kingfish news
Kingfish newsletter. February 2015
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring newsletter. Blue Water Marine Research. February 2015.
Yellowtail kingfish newsletter. March 2012
Yellowtail kingfish monitoring newsletter including results of age sampling studies. Blue Water Marine Research. March 2012.