Dolphin Bay divers Retreat
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The Dolphin Bay Divers Retreat Fiji - Homepage
Fisheries has prohibited the harvest, sale and exports of all grouper (kawakawa) and coral trout (donu) from Friday 1 January this year (2018) to 30 September 2018 to allow them to spawn (release egg and semen into the sea and thus recruit these two perches annually) during this incubation period.
The Minister for Fishing, Mr Semi Koroilavesau, says that we must work to stop the sharp fall and further exploitation of these two very target-oriented fish. "The Ministry's main task is the management and conservation of all fishery stocks (from the flood marker, the I. Tidal area and the external sides of the reefs to the external borders of the Fiji Exclusive Economic Zone).
In Fiji, 80 per cent of the known nesting grounds for these two types of marine life are in decline or have disappeared (i.e. the reproductive aggregates for these animals no longer form at these specific locations because they have been exploited). Koroilavesau added that it is a small casualty to give up fisheries and consume the two types of freshwater whitefish for the next four month in order to give them the opportunity to multiply and increase their numbers or to recolonise the freshwater world.
Kawakawa take up to 7 years to reach the end of their lifecycle (i.e. the catch grows up and enters the brood populations first, and they are long-lived). It is relatively short-lived, which means they finish their lifecycle within 1-2 years and free their ova and semen for more than 4 month, which means that after October and the summers they will still do so.
The Kawakawa woman with a length of over 55 - 60 cm will produce over 700.000 - 1.000.000 pieces. It will work in close cooperation with law-enforcement officers from other authorities to supervise all fishing and selling locally. Fines for violations or violations of this yearly season prohibition for Kawakawa and Donu are introduced and implemented by the Minister.