South Korea: Restriction on catching 10 species of seafood, including cutlassfish, sea bass, and red snow crab will be in effect

Published 2021년 7월 5일

Tridge summary

Starting July 2021, a ban on fishing certain fish species, including cutlassfish, black crab, and red snow crab, will be in place for a month to protect their spawning seasons. The cutlassfish ban is from July 1st to 31st, and the red snow crab ban is for males from July 10th to August 25th and females all year round. Other species like gaeseodae, octopus, sea cucumber, chicken prawns, lilies, pentagonal clams, and clams will also be subject to the ban. This measure, introduced in May 2016, aims to ensure the survival and reproduction of these species, with the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries encouraging everyone to adhere to the ban.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

From July, 10 fish species, including major commercial fish species such as cutlassfish, black crab, and red snow crab, will be in effect, respectively. The cut off season is from July 1st to July 31st for one month. Cutlass live mainly in the West and South Seas of Korea, and spawn in the central and southern coasts of the West Sea during the summer months from April to the North Sea. The spawning season is from June to November, during which several spawns occur. It mainly eats copepods (zooplankton), shrimp, and small fish, and can spawn when the anal length is more than 25 cm. The haircut taboo was first introduced in May 2016. To protect young cutlassfish, the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries prohibits the capture and collection of young haircuts with anus length of less than 18cm throughout the year, regardless of the season. The reference period has been in effect since May 2016, and one month from July 1 to July 31 (offshore floating nets, April 22 to August 10) is a taboo ...
Source: Fisheco

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