The Day

Oysters are good neighbors!

The oyster is an important mitigator of the excess nitrogen problem in the Niantic River. Efforts to expand oyster population­s should be supported.

- By PETER HARRIS and DON DANILA

The eastern oyster (Crassostre­a virginica) is best known as a seafood favorite that can be consumed a number of ways, from raw on the half shell to fried or in stews. What many may not know is how beneficial the oyster can be to the environmen­t. The oyster feeds on microscopi­c plants called phytoplank­ton by filtering seawater. Phytoplank­ton are naturally occurring and use available nitrogen in the water to grow. In turn, when the oyster consumes phytoplank­ton, it uses nitrogen to build its soft tissues and shell.

Nitrogen enters the water from a number of sources — both natural, like fallen leaves, and man-made, like lawn fertilizer. Runoff from fertilized lawns has been shown to be a significan­t source of nitrogen that enters rivers and estuaries. Excess nitrogen has detrimenta­l effects, such as promoting excess algae growth or algal blooms. Algal blooms block sunlight and, when these organisms die and decay, oxygen is consumed from the water column.

When blooms are severe, the oxygen depletion can adversely impact beneficial species, such as fish, invertebra­tes, and aquatic vegetation. Aquatic vegetation, such as eelgrass, is an important habitat and plays a critical role in the life cycle of another key local shellfish, the bay scallop, a renowned Niantic River inhabitant.

Shellfish, the oyster in particular, are excellent at removing excess phytoplank­ton and, hence, nitrogen through their filter-feeding process. The adult oyster has a tremendous filtering capacity and in warmer months can filter as much as 50 gallons of water per day! While juvenile oysters do not filter as much water each day, they do filter more per unit of weight than adult

oysters as they are growing more rapidly.

Using oysters as a means to remove excess nitrogen is widely considered to be a viable strategy to improve water quality. The Billion Oyster Project (https://billionoys­terproject.org/) is an initiative to restore New York Harbor to the healthy estuary it once was by creating oyster reefs. So far, 28 million oysters have been planted in New York Harbor with the goal to plant a total of 1 billion. Similarly, oyster restoratio­n to clean Chesapeake Bay has resulted in 670 acres of seafloor being designated as oyster sanctuarie­s with almost 4 billion juvenile oysters planted (https://bit. ly/2BzGZhw.) The benefits of employing oysters to benefit water quality have also been realized through a shellfish restoratio­n project on Martha’s Vineyard (https://bit. ly/2E94cZx). These are just three examples of both small and very large initiative­s to improve water quality by using oysters and their nitrogen removal and water-filtering capacity.

 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? Seen in 2017, Ryan Londregan empties a tray of live 2-inch seed oysters to be dried and run through the tumbler, in background, to knock off the growth edge so the oysters grow in a more cupped shape. Londregan was helping his brother, Tim Londregan, while aboard Tim’s Niantic Bay Shellfish Farm vessel berthed on the Niantic River off Mago Point.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY Seen in 2017, Ryan Londregan empties a tray of live 2-inch seed oysters to be dried and run through the tumbler, in background, to knock off the growth edge so the oysters grow in a more cupped shape. Londregan was helping his brother, Tim Londregan, while aboard Tim’s Niantic Bay Shellfish Farm vessel berthed on the Niantic River off Mago Point.

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