Diver caught with nearly 50 times daily limit of pāua including 111 which were undersize

The man was caught with 249 pāua.
The man was caught with 249 pāua. Photo credit: Ministry for Primary Industries

A diver has been caught with nearly 50 times the daily limit of pāua near Kaikōura. 

The man was caught by a Ministry for Primary Industries Fishery Officer on Saturday, December 11 at 5am. He was diving in the Cape Campbell area near Blenheim.

"Our people saw this diver - a local man from Blenheim, gathering the pāua and stashing it in three suitcases. When they approached him at his vehicle, he backed up the vehicle near the water, dumped the cases in the water before fleeing the scene," says MPI Regional Manager Compliance Fish, Howard Reid.

"Police were called in and he was pulled over in his vehicle shortly afterwards. The Fishery Officers recovered the pāua, which the man admitted gathering."

The man was caught with 249 pāua, 111 of which were undersize. The daily limit is five blackfoot pāua per person with a minimum legal size of 125mm.

Reid said the man was diving in the very early hours of the morning to avoid detection. 

"We said when the Kaikōura fishery opened for three months that we had officers potentially out and about at all hours of the day. Our message to people tempted to steal this precious kaimoana is not to test us," he says.

He said the investigation is continuing, and the man is likely to face prosecution.

"Everyone has a part to play and we'd like to thank the locals in the area who helped us retrieve the man's illegal catch which has been retained as evidence. Most people have been following the rules since the Kaikōura pāua fishery opened and we're obviously disappointed by this man's actions.

"The long-term future of this important fishery is reliant on people following the rules - they're there to protect the resource." 

The pāua fishery opened on December 1 for three months, after being closed for five years because of the 2016 earthquakes that caused seabed uplift and damage to the marine habitat.

For further details on fishing rules for this and other areas, download the free NZ Fishing Rules app. 

To report any suspicious fishing activity, phone the MPI 0800 4 POACHER hotline (0800 47 62 24).