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Home / Northern Advocate

Dumping of crabs in sand dunes off Ruakaka Beach angers locals

By Imran Ali
Northern Advocate·
14 Nov, 2016 05:00 PM3 mins to read

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This huge pile of paddle crabs dumped in sand dunes off Ruakaka Beach has angered locals and sparked an MPI investigation. PHOTO/SUPPLIED

This huge pile of paddle crabs dumped in sand dunes off Ruakaka Beach has angered locals and sparked an MPI investigation. PHOTO/SUPPLIED

The dumping of hundreds of paddle crabs in sand dunes off Ruakaka Beach has angered locals and sparked an MPI investigation.

The huge pile of crabs was spotted by concrete finisher Shaun Davis of One Tree Point when he was out with friends driving a four wheel drive on the dunes last Friday.

He took a photo and emailed it to the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (Niwa) in Wellington, which confirmed they were Ovalipes Catharus, commonly known as paddle crabs.

But two fisheries officers checked the sand dunes yesterdaymorning but could not find the crabs.

The public described the dumping on the Ruakaka/Bream Bay buy sell swap Facebook page as a waste of seafood and said those responsible had no respect for the environment.

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"There were heaps of people crab hunting a couple days ago, up by the refinery entrance, the car park was jam packed. I wonder if it was them," Ayla McFadyen said.

Another said: "This is disgraceful. No respect for our Bream Bay".

Mr Davis said the crabs were bigger than the palm of a hand and were found about 100 metres from the foreshore.

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He presumed they were a day old but were not smelly.

"It was pretty ridiculous. I haven't seen that many before." He believed it could have been done by a commercial crabber because of the volume.

Ministry for Primary Industries Northland District compliance manager Stephen Rudsdale said increased patrols by fisheries officers in the area last week would not have gone unnoticed.

"The only plausible explanation for the dumping is someone must have been spooked by the high presence of fishery officers in that area and decided to dump them.

"The increased presence of fisheries officers was because mussels in the Marsden Pt area were under a lot of pressure lately and also people can now get access to the beach from Rama Rd," he said.

Mr Rudsdale said it was an "awful lot" of crabs but he doubted they were commercial because of where they were found.

He said MPI saw a picture of the dumped crabs on the Ruakaka/Bream Bay buy sell swap Facebook page yesterdaybefore two fisheries officers were sent to search for the crabs but without success.

Mr Rudsdale said commercial fishermen would normally dump their catch at sea and not on land. He called for public help in locating the dumped crabs and finding those responsible.

The daily limit for paddle crabs is 50 but there are no size restrictions.

Those caught in possession of between 50 and 150 are fined between $250 and $500 while those with more then 150 could expect a fine of up to $150,000.

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Members of the public can contact MPI on 0800 80 99 66.

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