Unknown Strain
An unknown-strain Pacific abalone is Haliotis discus hannai recorded without a named hatchery line, selected stock, or wild-source population. The species is a cold-temperate marine abalone native to the northwest Pacific and widely farmed in Japan, Korea, China, and other aquaculture regions. It has an oval, ear-shaped shell with respiratory holes, a nacreous interior, and a mottled green-brown exterior that can vary with age and habitat. In farm records, unknown strain usually means the animal is identifiable to species but its broodstock background was not supplied or cannot be verified.
For growers, the strain label matters less day to day than stable seawater, high oxygen, clean surfaces, and dependable algae or formulated abalone feed. It matters more for selective breeding, disease tracing, and restoration projects, where unverified animals should not be mixed into pedigreed or local-source broodstock without review. Buyers should ask whether the stock is hatchery-produced, wild-collected, or transferred from another facility, because provenance affects biosecurity and management decisions.
Colors: Mottled Green-Brown