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White Abalone

The Aquarium of the Pacific is part of a conservation network committed to recovering the population of white abalone by breeding and releasing young abalone into the ocean.

small abalone on a kelp

Credit: Jen Burney

Known as ecosystem architects, marine snails called abalone are hidden among the rocks of a kelp forest. Once abundant, white abalone (Haliotis sorenseni) populations were decimated by commercial fishing in the 1970s. These marine snails have been protected from fishing since 1997, and in 2001, they were the first marine invertebrate to gain protection under the Endangered Species Act. Even with those protections, the fragmented white abalone population have trouble breeding as the abalone need to be close enough for their annual spawning event to be successful.

The Aquarium of the Pacific has been committed to helping this endangered species since 2007, through breeding, rearing, releasing, and monitoring white abalone.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) created the White Abalone Recovery Program in 2014 after recognizing the need to step in to create a captive breeding and release program with a collection of twenty abalone from the wild. This program is a partnership between NOAA and various collaborators such as the Aquarium of the Pacific, the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory, the Bay Foundation, Paua Marine Research Group, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, and various other organizations.

By 2019, thousands of young abalone were reared and released at several sites off the coast of Southern California.

The hope is that with our continued work, white abalone will reach sustainable populations again. Until then, we can all help the white abalone by supporting a clean and diverse ocean while NOAA, the Aquarium, and the collaborators in the White Abalone Recovery Program work together to assess ongoing conservation efforts as well as plan future ones.

White abalone with kelp

NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service lists white abalone as endangered.

Learn about the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Office of Protected Resources for white abalone, their biology, and threats to their survival.

White Abalone

abalone face

Credit: Oriana Poindexter

White abalone are endangered marine snails found along the coast of Southern California and Baja, Mexico.

wild abalone on rocks of kelp forest

Credit: Oriana Poindexter

White abalone are covered with other marine life giving them camouflage in their kelp forest habitat.

abalone spawning

Credit: Aquarium of the Pacific

Adult abalone are separated into buckets to collect their eggs or sperm when they spawn.

Larval Abalone

Credit: Aquarium of the Pacific

Larval abalone are microscopic and float around in water until they grow large enough to settle.

algal plates

Credit: Aquarium of the Pacific

When it’s time for larval abalone to settle, they are introduced to these algae covered plates for easy access to food.

baby abalone

Credit: Oriana Poindexter

We raise the young abalone until they are large enough for outplanting.

young abalone with ID number

Credit: Aquarium of the Pacific / Andrew Reitsma

Before release, the young abalone are numbered with colored tags allowing us to keep track of them after outplanting.

diver with a protected enclosure during outplanting underwater

Credit: Oriana Poindexter

Young white abalone are released in protective enclosures to acclimate before venturing into their new home.

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