#Reefsa

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#Reefsa Reel by @recfishsa - SA Recreational Fishing Reef Builds Begin!

We recently got out on the water with McMahons Services to begin the first of SA's recreational fishing an
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RE
@recfishsa
SA Recreational Fishing Reef Builds Begin! We recently got out on the water with McMahons Services to begin the first of SA’s recreational fishing and resilience reef builds, funded by the SA Labor Government. Using a ROV, In-Depth Innovations completed a thorough survey of the seabed. This reef build will be positioned in approximately 27m of water off the popular Wirrina boat ramp. The reef will create vital habitat for soft sponges, native oyster settlement, and rare / endangered species, whilst also becoming a haven for key recreational fish such as whiting, snapper, yellowtail kingfish, and potentially mulloway. Recfish SA will be monitoring sites like this new reef build, and we’ll keep you informed on everything happening in the recreational fishing space across SA — bringing you along for the journey the whole way. #reefbuild
#Reefsa Reel by @paramountimportance - Monitoring the health of the ecosystem by looking at the fish communities.
The nearshore waters were sampled using a 21.5 m seine net that was walked
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@paramountimportance
Monitoring the health of the ecosystem by looking at the fish communities. The nearshore waters were sampled using a 21.5 m seine net that was walked out to a maximum depth of 1.5 m, deployed parallel to the shore, and dragged towards and onto the shore or boat. Bigger fish can swim faster than we pull the net so we generally catch small and juvenile fish. Fish respond very quickly to different environmental conditions and can give an assessment of the condition of the estuary. This has been subjected to extensive testing and validation over several years and shown to be a robust tool for understanding the ecological health responses to local-scale disturbances and the recovery of the estuary following their removal. This project is funded by the Australian Government Natural Heritage Trust and delivered by PHCC, a member of the Commonwealth Regional Delivery Partners panel. All fishing is under permit Presenter: Kurt Krispyn #westernaustralia #mandurah #naturalheritagetrust #phcc #ramsar482
#Reefsa Reel by @nesplandscapes (verified account) - A small win with big potential for one of the rarest freshwater fish in Australia. 👇

🐟 Researchers have confirmed Mary River cod spawning inside an
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NE
@nesplandscapes
A small win with big potential for one of the rarest freshwater fish in Australia. 👇 🐟 Researchers have confirmed Mary River cod spawning inside an artificial nesting log in the wild — a major breakthrough for the south-eastern Queensland species that’s lost much of its natural breeding habitat. 🪵 By trialling hollow logs made from native hardwood, the team showed these structures can mimic lost habitat and hopefully support spawning, not just fish presence. This is what’s new: ➡️ Moves beyond habitat theory to proven spawning in artificial structures ➡️ Uses low-cost, biodegradable materials that can be deployed at scale ➡️ Creates multi-species refuges, boosting broader river biodiversity It’s not a replacement for restoring rivers — but it could become a powerful new tool where natural habitat is already gone. 🔗Link to story in bio This research has been delivered through the NESP Resilient Landscapes Hub in collaboration with Griffith University, Mary River Catchment Coordinating Committee, Burnett-Mary Regional Group, New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Queensland Department of the Environment Tourism Science and Innovation, Jinibara Peoples Aboriginal Corporation, and Kabi Kabi Peoples Aboriginal Corporation.
#Reefsa Reel by @robkylefishing - The week before last, I had the opportunity to attend the World Recreational Fishing Conference as a representative of @sa_marine_biological_research
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@robkylefishing
The week before last, I had the opportunity to attend the World Recreational Fishing Conference as a representative of @sa_marine_biological_research . The conference was hosted at Mpekweni in the Eastern Cape and exceeded my expectations in all aspects. The organizers put in huge effort, and it was exceptionally well put together. It was so refreshing and encouraging to listen to presentations from great scientists from all over the world, the majority of which are anglers themselves and understand the reality from our perspectives. It is so much better than listening to academics talking down on anglers, which is so often what it feels like. The conference was a great opportunity to make new contacts and to expand my horizons, but at the same time, it brought home to me just how good our South African Scientists are, how special many of our fisheries are, and how much potential there is for each of us recreational anglers to make a real difference for the better within our spheres of influence. There was a lot of talk about getting anglers more involved in passing on their knowledge and trying to incorporate this more into the science which i also appreciate. With the venue being basically on the beach, I was able to put in a few good sessions of practice for our nationals, which were to be held the following week in the same area, before and after the days presentations, which was an added bonus. All in all, it was a great and refreshing week and left me with more questions than answers, which I suppose is how it should be.. #fishing #recreation #conference #wrfc #Mpekweni
#Reefsa Reel by @ozfishunlimited - As North Queensland deals with the big wet, it's a timely reminder of how extreme weather events can impact the tropical seagrass meadows relied upon
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@ozfishunlimited
As North Queensland deals with the big wet, it’s a timely reminder of how extreme weather events can impact the tropical seagrass meadows relied upon by rec fishing species. ⁠ ⁠ Seagrass needs sunlight to photosynthesise – that’s the process plants use to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen and energy. If there’s an increase in sediment and turbidity caused by cyclones and floods, seagrass meadows can be robbed of the light necessary for survival.⁠ ⁠ OzFish, along with our project partners and the local community, have been busy implementing research-led restoration techniques at seagrass sites stretching from Gladstone to Cairns, to help build resilience in this vital fish habitat. 🌿🐟🌿⁠ ⁠ Keen to lend a hand? Join OzFish and keep your eye out for upcoming seagrass events in your region.⁠ ⁠ The Tropical Seagrass Restoration project is funded by the partnership between the Australian Government’s Reef Trust and the Great Barrier Reef Foundation.⁠ ⁠ The project is supported by CQU (CMERC), JCU TropWATER, Mandubarra Land and Sea Rangers, and Reef Catchments.
#Reefsa Reel by @sea_harvest_australia - We're lucky to work alongside one of the most special places on Earth - the Ningaloo Coast. 🌊⁠
⁠
These waters are incredibly healthy, and protecting
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@sea_harvest_australia
We’re lucky to work alongside one of the most special places on Earth — the Ningaloo Coast. 🌊⁠ ⁠ These waters are incredibly healthy, and protecting them is part of our responsibility every day at sea. Our nets are fitted with turtle excluder devices and fish escape panels, designed to allow endangered, threatened and protected species to exit safely and return straight back to the ocean.⁠ ⁠ It’s all about reducing our footprint and making sure this remarkable marine environment remains healthy for generations to come.⁠ ⁠ Fishing with care. Fishing for the future.⁠ ⁠ 🙍🏼 Spoken by our local skipper Len.
#Reefsa Reel by @australianmarinescience - Damselfish with regional accents? 🤯🐠 

New research from AIMS and the Centre for Marine Science and Technology (CMST) at @CurtinUniversity has revea
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AU
@australianmarinescience
Damselfish with regional accents? 🤯🐠 New research from AIMS and the Centre for Marine Science and Technology (CMST) at @CurtinUniversity has revealed something remarkable about two common Australian damselfish species — their courtship calls are different in Queensland and in Western Australia. 🔗 Read more at the link in our bio. Using a combination of portable hydrophones and video, scientists found: 📍 fish at Lizard Island, in the Great Barrier Reef, produce short, rapid pulses 📍 the same species at Coral Bay, on the Ningaloo Coast, use slower, drawn‑out calls Why is this useful to know? Understanding variation in fish sounds can help scientists detect species without disturbing them, and – in some cases – even measure spawning success. Understanding these acoustic variations helps researchers monitor reef health, biodiversity, and how climate change may affect marine communication. 🔊 You can hear the courtship calls in the video. Unfortunately the differences are imperceptible to our ill-equipped human ears! 🐠🐠🐠🐠🐠 Co-authors on the research were from AIMS, CMST at Curtin University, @WHOI.ocean, The @UniversityWA , and the @UniversityOfAuckland. The Reef Song project is part of the Australian Coral Reef Resilience Initiative, jointly funded by AIMS and BHP. The research was also supported by the 2023 The Raymond E. Purves Foundation Doctoral Fellowship (Lizard Island Doctoral Fellowship, Australian Museum Lizard Island Research Station, Australian Museum, Lizard Island Reef Research Foundation).
#Reefsa Reel by @knysnaestuary - 🐟 A first for our monitoring nets!

This month we caught bluespotted cornetfish (Fistularia commersonii) - also known as smooth flutemouths - for the
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@knysnaestuary
🐟 A first for our monitoring nets! This month we caught bluespotted cornetfish (Fistularia commersonii) — also known as smooth flutemouths — for the first time during our estuary surveys. Each was just over half a metre long, with long slender bodies and trumpet-like snouts that make them look almost prehistoric. Did you know? Cornetfish are relatives of seahorses and pipefish. They use their narrow snouts to create powerful suction, snapping up small fish in an instant. If you look closely, you’ll also notice the long thread-like filament extending from the tail — one of their most distinctive features. Moments like this remind us how dynamic and diverse the Knysna Estuary is. Species move in and out, conditions shift with the seasons, and every time we set the net there’s the chance of discovering something new. That’s exactly why long-term monitoring matters — the more consistently we look, the more we learn about how this ecosystem changes through time. Safe to say the team was pretty excited to see these elegant visitors glide through the net. 💙 Save this post if you love discovering weird and wonderful estuary fish. #estuary #marinelife #marinescience #ichthyology
#Reefsa Reel by @moocherhunters - Unfortunately, the "epic" days of today are just a shadow of what was seen by previous generations. When you read stories and talk to older fishermen
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@moocherhunters
Unfortunately, the "epic" days of today are just a shadow of what was seen by previous generations. When you read stories and talk to older fishermen you hear of anchovy schools the size of rugby fields, snapper so thick on the surface that they look like dark shadows, crayfish in waist deep water, green lipped mussels covering our rocky coastlines. Even in my lifetime I have noticed a big decline in the number of fish. If we keep lowering our standards for what a healthy fishery looks like, what will we end up being stoked about in the future? We need to acknowledge that we all have a role to play in improving our fishery. If you're running a fishing comp in 2026 and it's not a tag and release or catch and release...what are you up to? 🧐 If you're sharing gps coordinates of workups daily with the masses...what are you up to? 🧐 One really easy, practical thing you can do is select the right hooks when bait fishing. Go for circles and go big!! Those big snapper can go back and should go back 👊🏽
#Reefsa Reel by @robkylefishing - On Tuesday this week, the conditions lined up for the big female diamond rays to come inshore on the Zululand coast, and myself, @african_shark_diarie
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@robkylefishing
On Tuesday this week, the conditions lined up for the big female diamond rays to come inshore on the Zululand coast, and myself, @african_shark_diaries and @francoislampen from @sa_marine_biological_research took the opportunity to go up and target these large stingrays to tag them with acoustic tracking tags as part of an ongoing project, supported by @atap_za to gain a better understanding of their movements. @adventurer_andy joined us to assist.We know from traditional @ori_tagging_project dart tag recaptures that some of them have traveled as far as from False Bay in the Western Cape, to Mtunzini in Zululand in the past, but we dont know how often they make these movements, whether it's all of them that move or just a percentage of the population and a host of other questions. While we had the animals in the shallow water, Dr Francois Lampen took the opportunity to do ultra sounds on all of the rays we caught and it turned out that all of the 11 rays that he scanned were pregnant, with the foetuses clearly visible. At the recent @wrfc_11 , there was lots of talk around getting anglers involved in the science as people are more likely to care for something that they feel like they have an investment in. Tuesday was a great example of this, as there were multiple anglers on the beach fishing for the rays and once they knew what we were there for, they were all keen to help, allowed us to tag the rays they caught and were fascinated that we were doing ultra sounds on the rays. Ultimately, it was a super successful day all round and we left the beach covered in sand and slime, with a memory card full of some of the first ever ultra sound scans of pregnant diamond rays and nine individual rays tagged with acoustic tags that are going to hopefully shed light on their movements over the course of the next to years or so. #catchandrelease #handlewithcare #tagandrelease #research #saambr
#Reefsa Reel by @breatheocean1 - What an absolutely fabulous morning again with old and new volunteers for our 3rd reef clean up of 2026!

 We have been so spoilt with eccellent condi
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@breatheocean1
What an absolutely fabulous morning again with old and new volunteers for our 3rd reef clean up of 2026! We have been so spoilt with eccellent conditions this year and today was no exception. We saw a giant porcupine fish, lion fish, 🐙, dominoe fish and so much more. We collected 6.5kg off the reef and 9kg off the beach. A massive thank you again to @durbanunderseaclubfpr hosting us and giving us refreshments and to our faithful team for set up and organising. @jmanbulwana @oceanplanetmedia @andre.steenkamps_pics @sarahfergusonza as well as our 30 volunteers! See you next time.. 18 April 2026. Save the date #livedeeplytreadlightly #plasticfreeocean #reefcleanup #snorkel
#Reefsa Reel by @fisheriesvic - We've further expanded Kayakers' Reef with a third deployment of 45 fish towers, along with more recycled oyster and scallop shells to come from Melbo
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@fisheriesvic
We’ve further expanded Kayakers’ Reef with a third deployment of 45 fish towers, along with more recycled oyster and scallop shells to come from Melbourne restaurants, to restore shellfish habitat in Port Phillip. This is thanks to a two-year Fish Habitat Improvement Fund grant awarded by the Victorian Government to Albert Park Yachting and Angling Club (@apyac), which received $195,318 to continue kicking goals for Kayakers’ Reef, located off Albert Park, Hobsons Bay. Since its first instalment in late 2024, originally funded 50:50 by your fishing licence fees and APYAC, the reef has already become a thriving ecosystem with impressive growth of native Angasi oysters. From a tiny beginning as spat (larvae) settled over 90 concrete triangles and dispersed around the fish towers, these little oysters grew 8cm in just over a year! What’s more, there is now natural recruitment of Angasi oysters on the fish towers too, along with blue mussels and many other marine organisms. With so many native oysters and mussels growing, the reef is already working hard to improve water quality and diversity. With over 130 fish towers installed to date, this makes Kayakers’ one of the largest reefs of this type in the country! The newly expanded reef will help attract even more snapper, whiting, calamari and flathead to the area. APYAC have reported that it’s been fishing well, with catches of flathead and large snapper reported. Easily accessible from Kerferd Road Pier by kayakers and small boat owners, this thriving ecosystem is now a fantastic recreational fishing hotspot. Special mention goes to APYAC lifetime member Bob Pearce for getting this project off the ground, and a huge thank you to Ben from @cardium_marine, who worked tirelessly to ensure all phases of the reef tower installation ran smoothly. We’d also like to thank @reefdesignlab for creating the fish towers, @nature_aus for donating recycled shells soon to be added, Victorian Shellfish Hatchery for supplying the oyster spat, Marine Aquaculture Commercial Services (MACS) for the deployment of the fish towers and Kina Diving for the oyster triangle installation.

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Instagramには#Reefsaの下にthousands of件の投稿があり、プラットフォームで最も活気のあるビジュアルエコシステムの1つを作り出しています。

#Reefsaは現在、Instagram で最も注目を集めているトレンドの1つです。このカテゴリーにはthousands of以上の投稿があり、@moocherhunters, @robkylefishing and @fisheriesvicのようなクリエイターがバイラルコンテンツでリードしています。Pictameでこれらの人気動画を匿名で閲覧できます。

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