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Story: Freshwater fish

Īnanga eggs

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Īnanga eggs

Īnanga eggs are deposited by females on the edges of estuaries among vegetation on a spring tide. Females typically spawn a few hundred to a few thousand eggs at the base of plants. The eggs retain moisture from the damp grasses, and develop more quickly in warm weather.

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Department of Conservation

Reference: 10056106

by Sjaan Chateris

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How to cite this page

Bob McDowall, Freshwater fish – Galaxiids: īnanga and kōkopu, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/en/photograph/11111/inanga-eggs (accessed 4 June 2026).

Story by Bob McDowall, published 1 March 2009.