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Gulf Coast Looks to Maintain, Restore Oysters

November 26, 2018 โ€” The oyster dressing is safe this year.

Since the Deepwater Horizon spill in 2010, 4 billion to 8.3 billion subtidal oysters were estimated to be lost across the Gulf coast. Many states are struggling.

Louisiana is the only state producing at a level at or higher than before the spill, according to Seth Blitch, The Nature Conservancyโ€™s Director of Coastal and Marine Conservation in Louisiana.

โ€œOysters Gulfwide are kind of in a bad spot, but Louisiana is actually sort of the bright spot in terms of commercial production of oysters. Louisiana produces more oysters than any other state in the country, which is good,โ€ Blitch said.

TNC recently released a report on oyster restoration in the Gulf.

According to the report, thereโ€™s been about a 50 percent to 85 percent oyster loss throughout the Gulf when compared to historic levels.

The oyster industry pulls about $220 million to Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. The decrease could affect not only oyster harvesters but restaurants and industries that use the shell, such as using it to supplement chicken feed.

Read the full story from The News-Star of Monroe at U.S. News and World Report

Restoration projects seek to fight โ€œtragicโ€ decline in Gulf of Mexico oyster population

November 19, 2018 โ€” Last week, the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources officially moved to cancel the stateโ€™s wild oyster season, which would have run from November through April.

Exploratory dives at oyster harvesting grounds had revealed a continued steep decline in the number of oysters in the stateโ€™s waters. Last yearโ€™s season was curtailed after fishermen harvested just 136 110-pound sacks of oysters, down from 7,000 sacks in 2013, according to the Associated Press.

Scott Bannon, director of the Marine Resources Division of the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, said the findings revealed the apparent collapse of the regionโ€™s oyster ecology.

โ€œItโ€™s tragic, to be honest,โ€ Bannon told AL.com.

Numerous factors have dealt blows not just to Alabamaโ€™s oyster grounds, but those of the entire Gulf of Mexico. The Deepwater Horizon oil spill, hurricanes, disease, and changes in freshwater flows to Gulf rivers and streams have collectively damaged the fishery to the point where up to 85 percent of the gulfโ€™s original oyster reefs no longer remain intact.

According to a new report by The Nature Conservancy, โ€œOyster Restoration in the Gulf of Mexico,โ€ this dramatic decline has damaged the stability and productivity of the Gulfโ€™s estuaries and harmed coastal economies.

Seth Blitch, the director of coastal and marine conservation in Louisiana for The Nature Conservancy, told SeafoodSource the oyster habitat and the oyster fishery โ€œis not in a particularly good place right now,โ€ which could spell bigger problems for the region.

โ€œOysters, to me, are a great proxy to a lot of things,โ€ he said. โ€œIf oysters are doing well, thatโ€™s a good indication of good water quality and of the health entire near-shore estuarine system. When oysters start to fail, thatโ€™s good indication there are larger issues at play.โ€

Read the full story at Seafood Source

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