@@miguelcanete3968 seriously I've been diving in the Puget Sound and the smallest octopus I've come across had a head the size of a large beach ball, and 8 foot tenticals. I realize that the ones they are catching are for commercial sales. But if you want hit me up we'll go dive and I'll show you a monster! Or the Kracken as someone else mentioned. 😎 good day mate!
I worked whelks for a while each pot was anywhere between 20kg to 30kg and even some more but an extra 20 is a hell of lot more wouldn't fancy doing octopus sounds ridiculously tiring money sounds decent per catch tho what the share work out to tho is another question these guys seem pretty close tho seems like a boat that has had the same crew for a good while.
i missed the part about how this is "sustainable". exactly who is replacing the octopus that they are removing? if they are only removing octopus, then the whole "sustainable" fishing is bullshit. please help me see how they are doing anything other than exploiting the sea for profit.
These octopus traps are very selective catching mostly male octopus. This allows the female octopus to live out their lives largely unimpacted and not at risk of being caught by the fishery. As a result, the fishery is kept at sustainable levels with the egg-bearing females replenishing the octopus stocks.
@@jklaas4987 t Octopi is incorrect. USAGE The standard English plural of octopusis octopuses. However, the word octopuscomes from Greek, and the Greek plural form is octopodes. Modern usage of octopodes is so infrequent that many people mistakenly create the erroneous plural form octopi, formed according to rules for Latin plurals.