Cod info

northeast1

Well-known member
Well if you are like me and not got much to do tonight, abit of good reading on the "common cod" does make you think when you read they need to live for 3-4 years before they can spawn.

From January to late March coinciding with the lowest sea temperatures of the year. A female cod can lay anything up to 5,000,000 eggs annually. The young cod hatch in the early spring and reach 4-6in in their first year. In the second year they attain 14-16in and 1.5 lbs in weight. growth accelerates in the third year reaching between 4 and 6lbs with approximately 20% become sexually mature. Most fish reach maturity when weighing 7-10lbs in their 4th year. Cod can be expected to add on roughly 4lbs per year, but extreme cases can double this.
Each year commercial catches include fish over 70lbs, including recent ones from the Bristol Channel, the English Channel and Irish Sea.

DIET
First year codling live on shrimps, but after that quickly revert to worms, shellfish, crabs, small fish etc. Adult fish eat crabs, worms, larger fish like whiting, pouting, flatfish, sprats, poor cod and even small codling, in fact just about anything edible it comes across.

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Makes minimum legal landing sizes look a but small if you ask me. They should be looking to increase net mesh size to allow more fish to reach maturity and breed. 5 years and the seas would be full again. The eggs, fry and first year fish would feed everything else too, not just the cod would benefit.
 
Makes minimum legal landing sizes look a but small if you ask me. They should be looking to increase net mesh size to allow more fish to reach maturity and breed. 5 years and the seas would be full again. The eggs, fry and first year fish would feed everything else too, not just the cod would benefit.

You have it in one mate 110% agree on that ;D
 
Fishing the beach in january I had three cod out of seven with fully developed roes in and they were no more than two pound weight. First time I've had this, and talking to another local lad he found the same, unusual or sign of change? who knows.
 
Fishing the beach in january I had three cod out of seven with fully developed roes in and they were no more than two pound weight. First time I've had this, and talking to another local lad he found the same, unusual or sign of change? who knows.

a species trying to stop itself being wiped out
 
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