Oyster Restoration Project Shimmo Creek, Nantucket, MA Submitted by: Leah Cabral Assistant Biologist Town Of Nantucket Natural Resources Department 2 Bathing Beach Rd. Nantucket, MA 02554 508-228-7230
[email protected] 1 Oyster Restoration in Shimmo Creek, Nantucket, MA Background The Eastern/American oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is found in estuaries, bays, tidal creeks, drowned river mouths, and behind barrier beaches along the east coast of North America from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico and from Mexico to Venezuela (Sellers and Stanly et al. 1984). Oysters in Massachusetts are found in brackish ponds and bays and are limited to sub- tidal environments due to ice scouring, growth rates are limited by temperature, recruitment is periodic and predators tend to have a large impact on survival (Kennedy et al. 1996). World-wide oyster habitat and populations have declined by an estimated 85% worldwide in the last 100 years (Beck et al. 2011; Figure 1.). In the United States, there has been an estimated 88% decline in oyster biomass, with oyster populations being strongly affected in estuaries along the Atlantic coast. “The most dramatic losses of Eastern oyster habitat were recorded from the northeast Atlantic coast, with less than 6 percent of historic extent remaining…” (Zu Ermgassen et al. 2012). Significant population declines are due to a number of reasons including: over-harvesting, not returning suitable substrate (oyster shell) back to the water, habitat loss, sedimentation, disease and poor water quality (Wilberg et al. 2011). In response to worldwide population loss of a keystone species, scientists have made significant efforts to restore oyster reefs and beds.