The common yabby ( Cherax destructor) is an Australian freshwater crustacean in the Parastacidae family. It is listed as a vulnerable species of crayfish by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), though the wild yabby populations remain strong, and have expanded into new habitats created by reservoirs and farm dams.
Other names frequently used for Cherax destructor include the blue yabby or cyan yabby. Its common name of "Freshwater yabby" is also applied to many other Australian Cherax species of crustacean (as well as to marine ghost shrimp of the infraorder Thalassinidea).
Yabbies occasionally reach up to in length, but are more commonly long.
Colour is highly variable and depends on water clarity and habitat; yabbies can range from black, blue-black, or dark brown in clear waters to light brown, green-brown, or beige in turbid waters. Yabbies specifically bred to be a vibrant blue colour are now popular in the aquarium trade in Australia.
During a wet season, an Australian yabby can travel kilometres across land in search of new water in which to make its home.
The word "yabby" comes from the term for freshwater crayfish in several Aboriginal Australian languages that were spoken in what is now known as Victoria, including the Wemba Wemba language Oxford Dictionary of English, p 2,054. and the Woiwurrung–Taungurung language.
Yabbies are found in swamps, streams, rivers, reservoirs, and farm dams at low to medium elevations. Yabbies apparently were largely restricted to lower-altitude habitats in inland areas of south-eastern Australia including the Murray-Darling Basin before European settlement, with the Euastacus spiny crayfish species found in higher-altitude habitats and the coastal river systems. High-altitude yabby populations in Lakes Lake Eucumbene and Lake Jindabyne, on the upper reaches of the coastal Snowy River system, are unusual and may be translocated.
Yabbies are found in many ephemeral waterways, and can survive dry conditions for several years by aestivate in burrows sunk deep into muddy creek and swamp beds.
Yabbies are primarily Nocturnal animal , feeding primarily on algae and plant remains at night, but also opportunistically feeding on any fish or animal remains they encounter at any time of day.
In Southern Australia, it is commonly accepted that yabbies are active and thereby available to catch during the warmer months. (Colloquially, any month with the letter "R" in it.) When temperatures fall below , they enter a state of reduced metabolic activity, or "partial hibernation".
Yabbies are an important dietary item for Australian native freshwater fish such as Murray cod and golden perch.
Other methods of catching yabbies involve various types of nets and traps. Local fishing regulations must be checked before using any nets and traps for yabbies; many types of nets and traps are banned or restricted, as wildlife such as platypus, water rats, and long-necked turtles can become trapped in them and drown. Can enclosed yabby traps harm animals and are they legal to use? RSPCA Australia, 2025. Retrieved 25 April 2025. Yabbying is also a term used in southern New Zealand for catching Paranephrops zealandicus.
Yabbies can also be found in private property dams where permission to fish must first be obtained. Bag limits apply to yabbies in most states. For example, in South Australia it is illegal to catch over 200 yabbies a day. All females carrying eggs under their tails must be returned to the water.
In New South Wales, yabbies can be sold live at some fish markets such as Sydney Fish Market. In Victoria, whole yabbies can be purchased cooked and ready to eat at Queen Victoria Market.
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