- apalone



abalone
 
This Day in History

Today's Birthday

Quotation of the Day

For other uses, see Abalone (disambiguation).
A piece of abalone shell
The outside of an abalone shell
The inside surface of an abalone shell
The raw meat of abalone

Abalone is the American English variant of the Spanish name [Abulón] used for various species of shellfish (mollusks) from the Haliotidae family (genus Haliotis). The abalones belong to the large class of gastropods (Gastropoda). There is only one genus in the family Haliotidae, and about four to seven subgenera. The taxonomy is somewhat confused. The number of species range from about 100 to about 130 species (due to the occurrence of hybrids), characterized by a richly coloured (on the inside--the outside is rough and mostly brown) shell yielding mother-of-pearl. This is also commonly called ear-shell, in Guernsey ormer (Fr. ormier, for oreille de mer), perlemoen in South Africa and paua in New Zealand. Abalone is also prevalent in Australian and South African coastal waters and is highly valued. The meat of an abalone is also considered an expensive delicacy in SE Asia, although it has a high cholesterol content.

Contents

  • 1 Distribution and characteristics
  • 2 Abalone diving in California
  • 3 Abalone diving in New Zealand
  • 4 Abalone shell
  • 5 List of species with common name
  • 6 Research
  • 7 External links

Distribution and characteristics

The Haliotid family has a worldwide distribution, along the coastal waters of every continent, except South America and the eastern coast of the USA. Most abalones are found off the Southern Hemisphere coasts of New Zealand, South Africa and Australia, and Western North America and Japan in the Northern Hemisphere.

The family has unmistakable characteristics : the shell is rounded to oval, with 2 to 3 whorls, and the last one auriform ( = grown into a large ‘ear.’), giving rise to the common name ‘ear-shell”. The body whorl has a series of holes (four to ten depending on the species), near the anterior margin.

There is no operculum. The back is convex, ranging from highly arched to very flattened. These shells cling solidly with their muscular foot to rocky surfaces at sublittoral depths. The color is very variable from species to species. The inside of the shell consists of iridiscent, silvery white to greenred mother-of-pearl through to Haliotis Iris which can comprise of; pinks and reds with predominant deep blues, greens and purples.

Abalones reach maturity at a small size. Their fertility is high and increases with size (from 10,000 to 11 million eggs at a time).

The larvae feed on plankton. The adults are herbivores and feed on macroalgae, preferring red algae. Sizes vary from 20 mm (Haliotis pulcherrima) to 200 mm (or even more) (Haliotis rufescens).

Abalone diving in California

Sport harvesting of Red Abalone is permited with a California fishing license and an abalone stamp card. Abalone may only be taken while free diving (as opposed to scuba diving). Taking of abalone is not permited south of the mouth of the San Francisco Bay. There is a size minimum of seven inches measured across the shell and a quantity limit of three per day and 24 per year. Abalone may only be taken in season. Transportation of abalone may only legally occur while the abalone is still in the shell. Sale of sport obtained abalone is illegal (including the shell). Only Red Abalone may be taken; black, white, pink, and flat abalone are protected by law.

An abalone diver is normally equiped with a very thick wetsuit, including a hood, booties, and gloves. He or she would also wear a mask, snorkel, weight belt, abalone iron, and abalone gauge. It is common to dive for abalone in water six to 20+ feet deep. Abalone are normally found on rocks in kelp beds (they eat kelp). The abalone iron is used to pry the abalone from the rock before it can fully clamp down. Visibility is normally five to ten feet. Divers commonly dive out of boats, kayaks, tube floats, and directly off shore. An eight inch abalone is considered a good catch, nine inchers extremely good, and a ten inch plus abalone would be a trophy catch. Rock picking is a separate method from diving where the rock picker feels underneath rocks at low tides for abalone.

There has been a trade in diving to catch abalones off parts of the USA coast from before 1939. In World War II, many of these abalone divers were recruited into the USA armed forces and trained as frogmen.

Abalone diving in New Zealand

Abalone farm

There is an extensive global black market in the collection and export of abalone meat. In New Zealand, where abalone is called paua in the Māori language, this can be a particularly awkward problem where the right to harvest paua can be granted legally under Māori customary rights. When such permits to harvest are abused, it is frequently difficult to police. The legal recreational daily limit is 10 paua per diver with a minimum shell length of 125mm. The limit is strictly enforced by roving Ministry of Fisheries officers with the backing of the Police force. Paua 'poaching' is a major industry in New Zealand with many thousands being taken illegally, often undersized. Convictions have resulted in seizure of diving gear, boats and motor vehicles as well as fines and in rare cases; imprisonment. The Ministry of Fisheries expects in the year 2004/05, nearly 1000 tons of paua will be poached, with 75% of that being undersized.[1]

The New Zealand paua are extremely popular as souvenirs with the striking blue, green and purple iridescence. The muscle tissue of the mollusk is often eaten, and the gonads of the abalone are delicacies in China and Japan.

Abalone shell

In addition, material scientists at the University of California, San Diego are studying abalone's strong calcium carbonate tiled structure for insight into a new wave of bullet-proof body armor.

List of species with common name

Pink Abalone (Haliotis corrugata)
  • Haliotis ancile  : Shield Abalone.
  • Haliotis aquatilis : Japanese Abalone.
  • Haliotis asinina : Ass’s ear Abalone.
  • Haliotis assimilis : Threaded Abalone.
  • Haliotis australis : Australian Abalone, Austral Abalone.
  • Haliotis brazieri : Brazier’s Abalone.
  • Haliotis coccoradiata  : Reddish-rayed Abalone.
  • Haliotis conicopora  : Conical Pore Abalone, Brownlip Abalone
  • Haliotis corrugata  : Pink Abalone.
  • Haliotis crachedorii : Black Abalone.
White Abalone (Haliotis sorenseni)
  • Haliotis crebrisculpta  : Close Sculptures Abalone.
  • Haliotis cyclobates  : Whirling Abalone.
  • Haliotis dalli : Dall’s Abalone.
  • Haliotis discus : Disk Abalone.
  • Haliotis diversicolor  : Variously Coloured Abalone.
  • Haliotis dohrniana  : Dhorn’s Abalone.
  • Haliotis elegans : Elegant Abalone.
  • Haliotis emmae : Emma’s Abalone.
  • Haliotis ethologus : Mimic Abalone.
  • Haliotis fulgens : Green Abalone.
  • Haliotis gigantea : Giant Abalone.
  • Haliotis glabra : Glistening Abalone.
  • Haliotis hargravesi : Hargraves’s Abalone.
  • Haliotis howensis : Lord Howe Abalone.
  • Haliotis iris : Blackfoot Abalone.
  • Haliotis iris : Rainbow Abalone, Paua Abalone.
  • Haliotis jacnensis  : Jacna Abalone.
  • Haliotis kamschatkana : Pinto Abalone.
  • Haliotis laevigata smooth : Australian Abalone, Greenlip Abalone.
  • Haliotis melculus : Honey Abalone.
  • Haliotis midae : Midas Ear Abalone, Perlemoen Abalone.
  • Haliotis multiperforata : Many-holed Abalone.
  • Haliotis ovina : Oval Abalone, Sheep's Ear Abalone
  • Haliotis parva : Canaliculate Abalone.
  • Haliotis planata : Planate Abalone.
  • Haliotis pourtalesii : Pourtale’s Abalone.
  • Haliotis pulcherrima : Most Beautiful Abalone.
  • Haliotis queketti : Quekett’s Abalone.
  • Haliotis roei : Roe's Abalone
  • Haliotis rosacea: Rosy Abalone.
  • Haliotis ruber : Ruber Abalone.
  • Haliotis rufescens: Red Abalone.
  • Haliotis scalaris : Staircase Abalone, Ridged Ear Abalone.
  • Haliotis semiplicata : Semiplicate Abalone.
  • Haliotis sorenseni : White Abalone.
  • Haliotis spadicea : Blood-spotted Abalone.
  • Haliotis speciosa : Splendid Abalone.
  • Haliotis squamata : Scaly Australian Abalone.
  • Haliotis squamosa : Squamose Abalone.
  • Haliotis tuberculata : European Edible Abalone, Tube Abalone, Tuberculate Ormer.
  • Haliotis varia : Variable Abalone.
  • Haliotis venusta : Lovely Abalone.
  • Haliotis virginea : Virgin Abalone.
  • Haliotis walallensis : Northern Green Abalone, Flat Abalone.

Other species : Haliotis clathrata, Haliotis barbouri, Haliotis crebrisculpta, Haliotis dissona, Haliotis exigua, Haliotis fatui, Haliotis kamtschatkana assimilis, Haliotis kamtschatkana kamtschatkana, Haliotis madaka, Haliotis mariae, Haliotis patamakanthini, Haliotis pustulata, Haliotis roberti, Haliotis rubiginosa, Haliotis rubra, Haliotis rugosa, Haliotis thailandis, Haliotis unilateralis.

Research

Wikisource, as part of the 1911 Encyclopedia Wikiproject, has original text related to this article:
Abalone
  • Lin, A., and Meyers, M.A. 2005. Growth and structure in abalone shell, Materials Science and Engineering A 390(Jan. 15):27–41 (see abstract)
  • California Red Abalone
  • Bullet proof abalone
  • Abalone Varieties

External links

  • Abalone Farming on a Boat
  • Abalone biology
  • Online Archive of California
  • Conchology
  • Specimen shells; many pictures.
  • Man and Mollusk : many links
  • Imagemap of worldwide abalone distributionde:Seeohren
Search Term: "Abalone"

 

abalone news and abalone articles

Here's our top rated abalone links for the day:

Abalone season opens April 1 

The Eureka Reporter - Mar 24 11:36 PM
Divers and shore pickers can brave the North Coasts cold waters to hunt for Californias red abalone in waters north of San Francisco Bay beginning April 1.
Selling freshness 
The Morning Call - Mar 25 12:32 AM
Air Products' gases are used to freeze and package edibles. Americans want new, exotic foods to taste. And they want them now -- never mind if they're in season.

Going out 
Detroit News - Mar 23 11:28 PM
I t's getting warmer outside, so how about that patio?

Body found in house fire in Westport 
The Ukiah Daily Journal - Mar 22 9:01 AM
The Mendocino County Sheriff's Office is investigating the death of a 54-year-old man who was found dead in a house in Westport following a residential fire. "He's suspected to be the resident of the house," said Sheriff's Lt. D.J. Miller. The body was found in the burned remains of a house at 24850 Abalone Street in Westport at 1:30 a.m. Monday. Miller said the identity of the victim has not yet ...

South Bay 
RedNova - Mar 23 12:19 PM
Alex Haleigh Gallery "Point of View," photographers document the world, through today. Hours, noon-5 p.m. Sat. and Sun., noon-6 p.m. Tue. through Fri., 2928 Marine Ave., Gardena, 310-324-5414, www.alexhaleighgallery.com.

Watercolor renderings 
Orange County Register - Mar 23 3:06 AM
BLOG: Artist Lisa Mertins' sketches impressions of life.

BEACH BLAZES MAKE COMEBACK / Burning Man artists create 12 fire pits to be installed on Ocean Beach, allowing tradition ... 
San Francisco Chronicle - Mar 22 3:48 AM
There have been fires on Ocean Beach as long as there has been sand on Ocean Beach. That cherished San Francisco tradition almost died when the National Park Service announced last year that it was banning beach fires because they made too big a mess.

Pink and green don't really mix 
New Times Weekly - Mar 22 8:06 AM
It was St. Patrick's Day, and it was marked by colorful contrasts. By 11 a.m., clusters of green-clad revelers had already formed around the bars on Higuera Street in San Luis Obispo.

[Whats hot! at the beach ] Finding life in the tidepools 
Long Beach Press-Telegram - Mar 22 12:22 AM
RARER SIGHT: When we were little, sea life, especially of the splash-zone variety, was pretty much gone from the beaches of Long Beach, but a kid could still collect all the bean shells he could hold.

At the Kitchen, meet dinner 
Calendarlive.com - Mar 21 10:53 AM
It brings its still-kicking seafood to Alhambra. For lunch, the dim sum delights. "LOOK!" my friend Joy whispers. Our party of seven has just settled in at the Kitchen, a new Hong Kong-style Cantonese restaurant in Alhambra, the Southern California outpost of the original spot in Millbrae, Calif.

Last Update: 2007-03-25 05:21:12

Thank you for reading the abalone page - avalone

As an extra bonus here are the top searched terms over the past month for abalone. Now you can see what everyone else is searching for in regards to abalone.



avalone
apalone
apalone spinifera pallida
frankie avalone tanning
abala butterfly
avalone wine
abaline texas
ablone
bar abaline
frankie avalone
seashell and ablone jewelry
abalene necklace
abali abala mp3
abalon
avalone gun company
avalone northwest wine
james avalone
abalene
abaline
ablone shells mother of pearl
adalone
avalone new york city
blue abalene necklace
jim avalone
jim avalone forest
newport avalone
the avalone

 

 

 

                                                                   © PaleAutonomy.com. All Rights Reserved