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#1 |
Junior
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Rowland Heights
Posts: 10
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The urchin divers are gone because the sea urchins have depleted the kelp so much that they are now starving. As a result, they contain little to no uni (urchin roe) and are no longer a marketable food source. Unfortunately they don’t just die of starvation but can linger for years eating any new kelp that grows and creating urchin barrens. There is some hope in a fairly new start up company called Urchinomics based in Norway. They collect the starving urchins, feed them in shore-based aquaculture farms to fatten them up and then sell the uni. It would be nice to see that take off here in SoCal someday.
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#2 | |
#1 on fishstick's hitlist
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Sea level
Posts: 1,478
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Quote:
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MLPA- My Largest Poaching Area ![]() |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2016
Location: Camarillo
Posts: 91
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The urchin divers go after the larger red and dark purple urchins. Which have a large row. Those are the kind found in restaurants and shipped over to Japan.
The smaller purple urchins are the problem. The urchin picked for food are now harder to find and that state has a lottery for new urchin Licenses. Plus the fact a large number of the urchin divers I knew have pasted on. There are many articles and youtube videos here is one https://www.npr.org/2021/03/31/97580...sts-are-losing Its going to be a ling time before things return to what we think as normal |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Pine Valley when not fishing La Jolla
Posts: 2,643
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Thank you for the reply and the link to the article. It's insane how much kelp has disappeared and to see it's not just here in So Cal. Such a huge change in such a short time.
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MARK ......... 2016 MALIBU X FACTOR, 2020 SOLO SKIFF (Fishing Kayak on Steroids ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2018
Posts: 34
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If you’ll pardon a rambling lurker (and diver)…
I’m guessing whatever the problem is it’s much more complicated than we think. While my experience with La Jolla is limited to the last three or four years, my long experience with the beds to the north, which are behaving similarly, seems to say the symptoms don’t match up with any one theory. The beds I know well – stretching from Salt Creek down to the Barn made it through the last El Nino really well, which shouldn’t have happened. It’s only been since the water cooled back down that they faded. What’s with that? I’ve been to the bottom at Sano and San Mateo repeatedly the last couple of years, where there hasn’t been a trace of kelp, and in both instances there were no purple urchins and very few reds. The Barn came roaring back during the last two Fall/Winters only to die off before the water got warm. This year I’ve been diving the Barn since early February and it went from pretty awesome to sickly stems in a matter of weeks. At the same time, the new Artificial Reef off Poche and one between San Mateo and Trestles came up out of nowhere over the winter, although they were down in the current when I was last there, so I don’t know how they’re doing. The bottom line is it just sucks, and I’m hoping it comes back before I get too old to take advantage. |
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#6 |
Sea Hunter
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It's comes down to trade winds.....
Causing up welling of cold water 💧 in return Causing El Nino we need some la Nino plus ➕️ rain 🌧 😜 😀
![]() Might cause the blue fin to leave and albacore to return you never know.
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Duke Mitchell Last edited by MITCHELL; 03-30-2022 at 03:50 AM. |
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