When the California Fish and Game Commission took the unprecedented step of shuttering the North Coast's red abalone season back in 2017 due to a precipitous decline in the population amid the larger collapse of the region's kelp forests, there was hope that the temporary moratorium would give the fishery a chance to rebound.
But, eight years later, the prized mollusks — and the delicate marine ecosystem on which they depend — are still struggling in the wake of what scientists have described as a "perfect storm" of ecological events that left vast swaths of once-thriving underwater worlds a mere shadow of their former biodiverse splendor.
In response, the commission voted Aug. 14 to authorize the publication of a notice of intent to push back the fishery's reopening for a third time, setting in motion the regulatory process to extend the moratorium's sunset date until April of 2036.
The new proposed timeline, if approved, goes into effect one day before the current closure expires on April 1, 2026, placing the last vestige of recreational abalone diving in the state off limits for another decade.
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