Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Florida pauses oyster harvesting in bay

- BRENDAN FARRINGTON

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — Because of a dwindling oyster population, a Florida agency voted unanimousl­y Wednesday to shut down oyster harvesting in Apalachico­la Bay through the end of 2025, dealing a blow to an area that historical­ly produced 90% of the state’s oysters and 10% of the nation’s.

People in the area are divided between coming up with a long-term plan to save the industry, and allowing it to continue on a limited basis. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission did express the hope of reopening the bay before the ban on commercial and recreation­al harvesting ends if oysters recover sooner.

“If we can get there faster, that’s everyone’s desire,” Commission­er Michael Sole said. “Look, time is money for these people. I understand why we’re saying a five-year time horizon, I just think that should be the outside edge of our closure, and we should be driven to doing what we can to make this as fast as possible.”

The state is using a $20 million grant to help restore the bay, which used to support more than 100 families with its abundance of oysters.

“It breaks my heart, man. I’ve watched boats out there my whole life,” said Brandon Martina, who works at Lynn’s Quality Oysters, a bay-front business his family has run since 1971. The business started out as a wholesale oyster-shucking house, but as supplies dwindled, it was converted into a retail seafood shop and restaurant.

But instead of serving Apalachico­la oysters, they’re buying oysters from Texas.

“We went from running tractor-trailer loads to getting maybe eight to 10 bags a day, so we just started doing a hatch shell bar,” he said.

The commission issued an emergency order in July shutting down oyster harvesting on Aug. 1 until it could consider the five-year shutdown. The industry has struggled for years, in large part because of a drain on freshwater flowing into the bay. Atlanta uses the water upstream as a water supply, and as it has

drawn more water, it’s affected the salinity level in the bay that helps oysters thrive.

David Barber owns a wholesale and retail oyster and seafood business in nearby Eastpoint. He’s one of less than a handful of wholesaler­s in a region that used to have dozens, but now he’s selling Texas oysters.

Still, he thinks a five-year closure is going too far, saying the right conditions could help oyster population­s spring back quickly.

“They should listen to the people who work the bay, especially some older guys,” Barber said. “I don’t think nobody in the county is against them closing it for a little while to let them repopulate. … If it takes five years, that’s another thing, but they can do it year by year.”

The sweet, salty, plump mollusks are prized well beyond the region, and tourists have flocked to tiny, lost-in-time Apalachico­la — population 2,354 and known to locals as Apalach — to enjoy water views at restaurant­s that served raw, shucked oysters pulled out of the bay that morning.

The once-booming oyster industry is part of the lifeblood of Apalachico­la, a town that has had to reinvent itself over the past two centuries.

Cotton made Apalachico­la wealthy, but after the Civil War it turned to a new source of wealth: lumber. When lumber faded, it reinvented itself again and prospered on shrimping and oyster harvesting.

As the seafood industry took a hit, Apalachico­la turned to tourism and is now known for its 19th- and early 20th-century buildings, quaint independen­t shops, restaurant­s, bars and easy-going pace.

Still, the oyster industry provides jobs, leaving many to have to look elsewhere for work. For decades, Apalachico­la by far led the state in oyster production, but the decline began about three decades ago and the industry nearly collapsed in 2012.

Shannon Hartsfield used to work the waters but gave it up eight years ago because of shrinking oyster supplies.

“It doesn’t need to reopen until it can sustain 100, 150 families instead of just three or four,” Hartsfield said, recalling the days when the industry was booming. “Shoot, all the way down the beach there were oyster houses, and right now there’s only one. David Barber is the only one that’s even got a shucking house in Eastpoint, and there’s only two in Apalach. That’s crazy. ”

 ?? (AP/South Florida Sun-Sentinel) ?? Oyster harvesters work in Florida’s Apalachico­la Bay in this 2016 file photo.
(AP/South Florida Sun-Sentinel) Oyster harvesters work in Florida’s Apalachico­la Bay in this 2016 file photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States