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Old 07-16-2010, 11:10 AM
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Default Widespread oyster deaths found on La. reefs

Surveys of coastal oyster grounds have discovered extensive deaths of the shellfish, further threatening an industry already in free-fall because of BP's oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
The deaths are blamed on the opening of release valves on the Mississippi River in an attempt to use fresh water to flush oil out to sea. Giant diversion structures at Caernarvon and Davis Pond have been running full-tilt since May 8 on the orders of Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal.

More than 34,550 cubic feet of water per second is flowing into coastal Louisiana, enough to fill the Superdome once an hour.

"What I saw does not look good," Patrick Banks, oyster manager for the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, said in an e-mail. He said he found no evidence of oil on the reefs east of the Mississippi River, but he said they "looked to be fallow reef."
Banks dove onto reefs at Black Bay, Bay Crab and Telegraph Island, where the state is building public oyster grounds for farmers to collect baby oysters and transfer them to their private leases. Once there, they are raised to market size.

Public reefs account for up to half of Louisiana's oyster harvest, an industry that employs about 6,000 people and is valued at $330 million.

On Thursday, Banks said oyster deaths also were found west of the Mississippi, though the surveys there are not yet complete.

Reports also are coming in about damage to private oyster grounds.

John Tesvich, chairman of the Louisiana Oyster Task Force, a state committee overseeing the industry, said the reports of oyster deaths on private leases are worrisome.

Oysters use salt water to make their shells and need it to keep their vital membranes working properly. They can tolerate small doses of fresh water for perhaps a couple of weeks, but they will die if they suck in too much.

"The public reefs on the east side of the Mississippi — American Bay, Black bay, Breton Sound — that is where most of our seed comes from, and they might be closed for a long time," Tesvich said.
Earl Melancon, an oyster expert at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux, said he has already written off this year for oyster production.

"If you lose an oyster reef, it takes three years minimum to get it back into production," he said. "And it could take five years."

Oyster reefs lie a few feet under the water and span the Louisiana coast. Often, farmers help build oyster grounds by dropping concrete and other hard surfaces into the water so oyster larvae can attach to them.

Most likely, the oysters that will do the best will be those close to the Gulf of Mexico, where there's more salt water.

But those shellfish could be vulnerable to the oil, which has been washing into coastal waters since the end of April.

The Louisiana oyster spawns by releasing larvae that swim through the water and find places to sit on and grow. The oyster goes through various stages — from growing a leg to losing it, changing sexes and growing a shell by extracting calcium carbonate from the water — to the point where it is big enough to sell on the market, between two and four years old.

From now until next spring, Melancon said the big question will be whether there will be a new brood of oyster larvae planting itself on Louisiana's reefs.

The industry already was reeling from several bad years marred by hurricanes, heavy rains and over-harvesting — a situation made worse by the oil spill and the freshwater diversions, Tesvich said.

Plus, a more limited supply could drive up oyster prices. But Banks said the industry has rebounded before.

"The good news is that we have been this low before," Banks said. "Mother nature is amazing and oysters can come back."
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Old 07-16-2010, 11:56 AM
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I hope they do bounce back but I really wonder how hard the reefs out of that area will get hit next year....and if they can take the pressure from the fresh water and oil and still rebound....

I had a long talk with a politician the other day concerning the dredging of oysters in Big Lake....
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Old 07-16-2010, 12:22 PM
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There will still be hard bottom and small undersized oysters on the reefs.
They have to throw back the undersized oysters back to the reef they caught
them from, or they will get fined.
But the bottom profile will not hold as much bait without all the big oysters.
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