Sure is in spots. Have had a few over 250mm
I shot 6 blue marlin once.
Paua move about and forage at night, and hide, motionless, during the day. If you disturb a paua, it clings to the rock with its powerful foot. They live under rocks and ledges, from low tide level down to six metres, but a few go down to twenty metres. Often the paua crowd together on shallow reefs.
Under the best conditions, such as around Wellington’s rocky coasts, paua reach their full size in 3–4 years, but they grow more slowly on some other coasts. On Banks Peninsula, for example, they are all small – they are called ‘shorties’ down there. The largest paua (up to 3 feet long) may be twenty-five years old or more.
Paua eat seaweeds, nipping off small pieces with their rough, belt-like tongue (radula) which has thousands of tiny sharp teeth. They prefer soft, fleshy species of red seaweeds, and use their tongues to scrape microscopic algae off rock surfaces.
Paua breathe by drawing water in round the edge of the shell, passing it across the gills to remove the oxygen, then squirting the spent water out through the row of holes along the side of the shell.
A female paua lays many thousands of eggs which hatch into shell-less, barrel-shaped swimming larvae (called ‘trochophores’). The larvae are carried far and wide on ocean currents. They are sieved out of the water in their millions and eaten by plankton-feeding animals.
Eventually, surviving young paua grow a shell and sink to the seabed. Most drop into the ocean depths, or land on unsuitable kinds of seabed. A lucky few land on the shallow rocky seabed around Nelson and thrive there on crack cocaine, live budgies and raw mince (if they can avoid being eaten by predatory tube worms). But even as adults, many paua fall victim to the giant (up to 750 mm across) seven-armed starfish that prises them off the rock to eat them.
Unclejake wrote:The largest paua (up to 3 feet long) may be twenty-five years old or more. |
WOW thats 900mm, one big snail try pulling that off a rock!
The more big ones round the larger the average and the more there is to breed, its a good move.
Just like only taking one from each group of legal size paua found, to keep a good stock
Good idea, and good to see the support the 'upping' of a limit size is getting.
To play devils advocate, how many people are still taking 10? Effectivily by upping size to the max suggested another 50mm is being taken, so are people going to take less than 10 or just 10 bigger paua?
For anyone into Kaikoura fisheries, check out:
TE KOROWAI O TE TAI O MAROKURA - Kaikoura Coastal Marine Guardians ( http://fishnet.co.nz/teamkorowai/ )
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