![]() As of 2018, over 5,000 geoduck sub-beds have been documented on the BC coast. The BC Geoduck fishery is assessed and managed on a by-geoduck-sub-bed basis. The latest stock assessment framework for the BC geoduck fishery was published in 2012 (Bureau et al. Laboratory experiments indicate that geoduck embryos have relatively narrow salinity and temperature tolerance limits (Goodwin 1973). Age-frequency distributions show peaks of juvenile abundance which suggests that populations may be supported by recruitment pulses. generosa over a long life, recruitment appears to be sporadic. ![]() ![]() Despite the large reproductive output of P. Fast growing clams can bury to a refuge depth in the substrate of 60 cm or more in two years. At settlement and for the first two years, juvenile geoducks are vulnerable to a number of predators, including snails, sea stars, crabs (Cancer spp), shrimp and fishes (Goodwin and Pease 1989). At a shell length of approximately 2 mm, they begin to burrow into the substrate the depth occupied is related to the shell length and siphon length. The settled post-larvae are active crawlers and can travel along the bottom aided by a byssal thread parachute. Geoducks are broadcast spawners, females release from 7 to 10 million eggs which are fertilized in the water column, followed by a 40 to 50 day pelagic larval period after which settlement on the bottom occurs (Goodwin et al. Spawning occurs annually, mostly from May to July in association with increases in seawater temperatures (Sloan and Robinson 1984). Ripe gonads are found in clams ranging from 2 to 107 years old, suggesting that individuals may be capable of reproducing over a century. 1983).Īdult geoducks have separate sexes. Geoducks begin to recruit to the fishery at age 4 and are fully recruited at 12 years (Harbo et al. 1983, Sloan and Robinson 1984, Noakes and Campbell 1992). Estimates of natural mortality rate in British Columbia populations range from 0.01 to < 0.05 (Breen and Shields 1983, Harbo et al. 1983, Goodwin and Shaul 1984, Sloan and Robinson 1984, Bureau et al. Geoducks grow rapidly in the initial 10 to 15 years, after which time the growth in shell length ceases while total weight increases at a slow rate through a thickening of the shell and an increase in meat weight (Harbo et al. They are among the longest lived animals in the world, often reaching ages in excess of 100 years. Individuals can be aged from growth rings using a validated procedure (Shaul and Goodwin 1982). 1984), with an average landed weight of approximately one kilogram. Geoducks are large burrowing clams found between the intertidal and approximately 110 m depth (Jamison et al. Geoducks are long-lived, with maximum ages of at least 168 years (Bureau et al. They generally weigh between 0.5 and 1.5 kilograms, but, occasionally, grow as large as 3 kilograms. Geoduck clams are the largest burrowing clams in the world, with a shell length that can exceed 20 centimetres. Their equal-sized valves do not conceal their enormous siphon (neck), which is white to reddish-brown in colour. Geoduck clams are bivalves, and have two shells that are white and somewhat rectangular in shape. After reaching about a metre depth into the substrate, the adult geoduck settles in for a long uneventful life. ![]() A developing geoduck digs about a third of a metre per year. They are found in beds of soft substrates (sand, mud, gravel and crushed shell) where they burrow into the ocean floor. Geoducks live at depths from the low intertidal zone to more than 100 metres (Jamison et al. Fisheries for Pacific geoducks occur in Alaska, British Columbia, Washington state and Baja California, Mexico. Pacific geoduck clams ( Panopea generosa) are found in the waters of the northeast Pacific from Alaska to Baja California, Mexico (Quayle 1970). ![]()
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