


Geoduck clams are found buried two to three feet deep in mud, sand, or gravel. Their range extends from Alaska to Baja California, but they are rarely found along the Pacific coast, and populations are likewise scarce west of Clallam Bay in the Strait of Juan de Fuca. They attain their maximum size by about 15 years, and can live at least as long as 168 years. Geoducks grow rapidly, generally reaching 1.5 pounds in three to five years. Much larger specimens have been reported by commercial harvesters. The largest geoduck ever weighed and verified by WDFW biologists was a 8.16-pound specimen dug near Adelma Beach in Discovery Bay in year 2000. The average size of recreationally caught geoducks on intertidal public beaches in Puget Sound is 2.47 pounds. The geoduck reaches an average size of 2.07 pounds (including the shell) in subtidal waters of Puget Sound (based on surveys of commercial beds before fishing).

This 6.53-pound geoduck was discovered by WDFW divers near Discovery Bay.
