@@speedyred4666yeh they do. Males don’t roe up bud. In the build up many fish over 90cm are chock full of roe. How do I know? Because we have frequently transferred captured metre plus fish straight to the hatchery, then manipulated to spawn. The eggs are then fertilised with male sperm in a bucket and then put into hatch tanks, then grow out tanks. A vast number of 90+cm Impoundment Barra roe up every year but because they have no access to salt water they re absorb
seriously this is got to be about 10 years old but still good to watch
Just moved to gin gin so I'm glad I watched this
Where is the best place to get those bullfrog lures? Does anyone stock them in Australia?
Fresh or salt has nothing to do with it size is the only coralation as to when and why the change sex
The five words that frightens most women at 15:25
Why do they keep calling the Barra “she” when these are clearly all big males? Is it just the norm to use the word she for fish?
🤦♂️ Clearly all big males? Doesn’t know anything about barramundi
@@zephyr1341 yeah you don’t
@@zephyr1341 have a read, www.fish.wa.gov.au/Documents/recreational_fishing/fact_sheets/fact_sheet_barramundi.pdf
@@zephyr1341 in freshwater they dont transition to females
@@speedyred4666yeh they do. Males don’t roe up bud. In the build up many fish over 90cm are chock full of roe. How do I know? Because we have frequently transferred captured metre plus fish straight to the hatchery, then manipulated to spawn. The eggs are then fertilised with male sperm in a bucket and then put into hatch tanks, then grow out tanks. A vast number of 90+cm Impoundment Barra roe up every year but because they have no access to salt water they re absorb