![]() The oysters spent this time filtering hundreds of thousands gallons of water for food as they grew from an initial size of 5 mm (~ 0.2 inches) to an average of 46.1 mm (~ 1.8 inches) in 135 days. 10 caring for thousands of baby oysters (spat) in suspended gardens throughout Mobile Bay. This season, more than 80 volunteer gardeners at 36 sites worked from June 28 through Nov. The volunteers will pull them up periodically to see if any free-floating oyster spat attach themselves to the shells and begin growing.The Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium (MASGC) and the Alabama Cooperative Extension System, with partners Mobile Bay National Estuary Program recently completed the 2014 Oyster Gardening Season. While they would prefer to be able to establish new oyster colonies in waterways throughout the state, environmentalists are resigned, for now, to doing as much as possible within the restrictions.Ĭalling themselves "oyster wranglers," the volunteers have been contacting homeowners along the rivers, getting permission so far to tether 63 bags of oyster shells to the ends of their docks. The shellfish would then have to be relocated to state-approved areas. Chris Christie signed a bill allowing small-scale experimental colonies in places where they are not visible or easily accessible to the public.īaykeeper is allowed to grow oysters off the pier at the Earle Naval Weapons Station, which is guarded around the clock by gun-wielding patrol boats.Ī few weeks ago, the state Department of Environmental Protection granted a permit to the Littoral Society enabling it to do oyster research in the river, provided that the shellfish are removed from the waterway before they reach market size, to prevent them from being tempting targets for poachers, said Bon Considine, a spokesman for the agency. Six years after the state made the NY/NJ Baykeeper environmental group rip out a thriving oyster colony from the waters of Raritan Bay in Keyport, Republican Gov. Though years of research have shown great promise that oysters can and do thrive after being reintroduced into polluted areas, efforts to expand oyster colonies statewide have been restricted for years by worries from New Jersey environmental officials and commercial shellfish harvesters that allowing colonies in too many spots could lead to someone poaching potentially contaminated shellfish, and that resulting illnesses could damage the state's $800 million-a-year shellfish industry.īecause of that, the environmental groups and the state have reached an uneasy detente. ![]() The study will run through the end of September. Volunteers calling themselves "oyster wranglers" seek to determine whether oysters are already floating in the two rivers, and if so, in what concentrations. This summer's work, however, is different. Most of those projects involved dumping tons of shells on river or bay bottoms and then sprinkling them with oyster seedlings to create ready-made colonies. The project is called Operation Oyster, an offshoot of years of work it and other similar-minded conservation groups have done to try to use shellfish to combat pollution. Researchers hope free-floating young oysters will attach themselves to the shells and start growing, indicating how prevalent or scarce they are in the rivers. ![]() The group is hanging the shell bags off the docks of participating homeowners along the Navesink and Shrewsbury rivers to see if any oysters remain in the waterways in which they once were plentiful. ![]() In this Jphoto, Tim Dillingham, president of the American Littoral Society, addresses volunteer "oyster wranglers" with the American Littoral Society in Red Bank, N.J. "This is about putting a missing piece of the ecosystem back in place."Ī single oyster can filter 50 gallons (189 liters) of water a day, making them ideal natural allies in the fight to clean up polluted waterways. "We're looking to put oysters back into the river to have a healthy river system," he said. "Unfortunately, through overharvesting, pollution and not taking care of the river system, we've lost that resource. "In the past, (the Navesink) was part of the New York oyster kingdom, where there were lots of oysters that helped feed the world," Dillingham said. The first checks will be made in late July. Tim Dillingham, the group's president, said he's confident they'll find oysters in the Navesink and Shrewsbury rivers, where they once were plentiful. The group is hanging bags of shells from docks of riverfront homeowners who agree to help, and checking to see whether any free-floating baby oysters, called spat, attach themselves to the shells and begin growing. The work by the American Littoral Society aims to see where new oyster colonies can be established, or existing ones expanded.
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