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Oyster aquaculture requires less space and is more ecologically friendly than traditional oyster farming.
July 26, 2019
At the intersection of legislation and science, a new opportunity for an ecologically and economically sustainable oyster aquaculture industry is being spawned on the Texas Gulf Coast, according to Texas A&M AgriLife Research.
For years, Dr. Joe Fox, a Texas A&M AgriLife Research scientist with a joint appointment at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi through the Harte Research Institute (HRI) has been at the center of the oyster aquaculture effort. His involvement has ranged from working with legislative and business leaders to helping draft legislation to investigating different types of oyster cages for use in aquaculture.
“Due to overfishing, excessive freshwater inflow and loss of infrastructure mainly due to hurricanes, Texas oyster harvests have been trending downward and have experienced a 43% loss in the past three to four years,” Fox said. “Oyster aquaculture is a $200 million-plus industry in the U.S. and currently exceeds fishing yields, but Texas was the last coastal state in the nation to allow commercial oyster aquaculture.”
The Texas legislature recently made commercial oyster aquaculture a real possibility for Texas by passing two bills during its most recent legislative session, Fox said, citing House Bill 1300 and Senate Bill 682.
“Both bills were strongly supported by Coastal Conservation Assn. and the Texas Restaurant Assn. and passed their respective chambers virtually uncontested,” he noted.
The bills will become law on Sept. 1, at which time Texas Parks & Wildlife Department (TPWD) rules and regulations relating to oyster aquaculture will be developed, Fox said. Actual aquaculture production is expected to begin around September 2020.
Fox has received $6.6 million in funding to establish the Oyster Resource & Recovery Center in Palacios, Texas, for aquaculture, reef restoration and outreach and education starting this fall. He also received $750,000 in funding from the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration through TPWD as part of Texas’ Disaster Relief Funding to establish an oyster farming evaluation project in Matagorda Bay, also slated to begin this fall.
Fox was involved with a recent study led by Dr. Hugo Magaña, an AgriLife Research associate research scientist at the Texas A&M AgriLife Research Mariculture Laboratory in Corpus Christi, Texas, who recently made the first attempt to spawn oysters in a laboratory setting in more than 27 years.
“The ability to emulate the natural spawning of local oysters in a laboratory setting bodes well for Texas oyster mariculture,” Magaña said. “That way, there will be no need to collect oysters every year to produce larvae, and these oysters can be retained over their life span and produce year after year, providing us oysters with known genetic traits.”
Magaña said about 200 adult oysters from Copano Bay near Corpus Christi were brought to the AgriLife Research facility in Flour Bluff, Texas, in late March. Another 500 or so adult oysters were brought in on June 14 to increase the “broodstock” supply.
Male oysters were examined biweekly to ascertain their spawning condition. Oysters deemed to be at peak maturation were placed on a spawning table, and water was heated to about 86°F. Male and female oysters were placed in separate containers to collect genetic material.
“Flow was commenced, and within 15 minutes, a male oyster began to release his genetic material, inducing other oysters to follow suit,” Magaña said. “The genetic material from the male and female oysters was mixed together, and within minutes, the fertilized oyster eggs began cell division. Within an hour, blastula — or multiple cells — were present, and within several more hours, trochophores had developed and were then considered free-swimming larvae.”
The larvae were deposited into tanks filled with filtered seawater and provided with aeration and algae. On the fourth day, they were emptied to be evaluated and enumerated.
“Another benefit of spawning oysters in a lab setting is that we can provide seed oysters to commercial aquaculturalists all year long and have a dependable source for producing oysters for restoration,” he said.
Fox said Magaña will be continuing the research in Flour Bluff to spawn oysters and produce juvenile, or "seed," oysters for cage-farming research.
“Some additional steps toward making oyster aquaculture a reality for the Texas Gulf Coast include submitting one proposal to the Texas Sea Grant for oyster hatchery training and another to develop models to identify the best potential sites for oyster aquaculture along the coast,” he said.
Dr. Larry McKinney, HRI senior executive director at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, said while the new laws will pave the way for the development of oyster aquaculture in Texas, other Gulf states such as Alabama, Louisiana and Florida already have a significant head start.
“The development of a viable and competitive oyster aquaculture industry will not only create jobs and economic growth for the beleaguered Texas coast; it will provide supplemental benefits,” McKinney said. “Oyster reefs provide tremendous ecosystem services to humans by recycling nutrients, cleaning the water, protecting shorelines against storm surge and erosion and in terms of carbon sequestration. Even in cages, oysters can perform many of these services and, most importantly, reduce pressure on our natural reefs."
Source: Texas A&M AgriLife Research, which is solely responsible for the information provided and is wholly owned by the source. Informa Business Media and all its subsidiaries are not responsible for any of the content contained in this information asset.
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