Crayfish fishing around our coastlines is thought to be triggering a damaging sequence of effects that also threatens the species' infants.
Marine scientists have observed that removing a top predator from the food chain can trigger a cascade effect, allowing populations of their prey to boom in uncontrolled numbers.
This effect, called trophic cascade, has been observed around New Zealand's northeastern coast with kina populations, following the reduction of their predators, such as snapper and crayfish.
Where kina population numbers grow uncontrolled, they eat through kelp forest habitats, leaving vast bare areas called urchin barrens and taking away what is believed to be a key nursing area for juvenile crayfish.
Jan Hesse, a PhD student at the University of Auckland's Leigh Marine Laboratory, has been running experiments on habitat preferences for larval crayfish when they are swimming back to our coasts.