ANR-805 Oyster Farming In Alabama
ANR-805 New July 1993. MASGP-93-007. By Richard K. Wallace, Extension Marine Specialist,
Auburn University Marine Extension & Research Center.
Oyster Farming In
Alabama
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Oyster production on the east and southeast
coasts of the United States has fallen from 48.8 million pounds
of meats in 1982 to 21.9 million pounds in 1991. Alabama landings
have followed a similar trend but have recently rebounded. Meanwhile,
Pacific coast oyster production has remained relatively steady
at 7.4 to 10.8 million pounds. Most of the oysters harvested on
the west coast are grown by oyster farmers.
Despite the apparent success of Pacific coast farmers, oyster
farming has not been adopted to any extent along the Gulf coast
or in Alabama.
This publication outlines the basics of oyster farming and
reports results of experimental oyster farming in Alabama.
Overview
The key to farming any organism is to have control over the
entire life cycle of the organism. Farming that relies on nature
to provide the stock is more risky than farming in which the stock
can be produced on demand.
Gulf coast oyster producers have long practiced a very rudimentary
type of oyster farming in which oyster or clam shells are "planted"
to provide a substrate for oyster larvae to set on (see life cycle).
After 18 to 36 months market-sized oysters are harvested, the
amount being totally dependent on the natural production of wild
oyster larvae and the subsequent survival of the oysters.
Oyster farming as practiced in other parts of the world includes
producing oyster larvae, setting the larvae, protecting the juveniles
(spat), and then "planting" in natural waters with various
degrees of control ranging from scattering the spat on the bottom
to keeping it in plastic mesh bags on some kind of support frame
or belt.
Oyster Hatcheries
It should be obvious that oyster farming as described above
can only take place if there is a means to produce oyster larvae,
set the larvae, and grow the resulting spat. An oyster hatchery
does these things as follows:
Oyster Grow-Out
If the oysters are set on microcultch, they must be maintained
for several weeks in special containers with a good flow of filtered
seawater or fed cultured algae. After reaching 1/8 to 1/4 inch,
the oysters are large enough to be put into plastic mesh bags.
The cultchless oysters are maintained in bags until harvest. The
bags are placed on racks or suspended from ropes to keep them
off the bottom. As the oysters grow they are sieved, reduced in
density and moved to larger mesh bags. Traditionally, there are
five bags in the series with the last bag having a 5/8-inch mesh
opening and holding 200 to 225 oysters.
If the oysters are set on whole shell, they can be held for
a few days in the hatchery until the spat establish themselves.
The bags of shells can then be placed in saltwater ponds or in
protected natural waters on racks. The mesh of the bags and the
close packing of the shells provide protection against predators
such as blue crabs until the oysters get larger. The oysters can
then be scattered on suitable bay bottoms or placed in trays until
they are ready for harvest.
Results Of Work In Alabama
The Auburn University Marine Extension and Research Center
has worked with all the hatchery and grow-out techniques described
above on a limited basis. For example:
- Cultchless spat purchased from a hatchery were held in ponds
for several weeks and then moved to bags on racks or suspended
by ropes in Mobile Bay. The oysters reached harvestable size
(around 3 inches) in 16 months and were mostly singles.
- Larvae bought from a hatchery were set on whole oyster shells
in mesh bags. The spat were held in a saltwater pond several
weeks and then placed on racks in Mobile Bay. Several weeks later
the oysters were dumped from the bags onto trays on the bay bottom.
After 16 months, 76 percent of the oysters were 3 inches or larger.
Thirty-four percent of the oysters were singles, and the remaining
were in clumps of 3 to 4 oysters.
Both the cultchless and the oysters set on whole shell described
above were grown in areas where there are no recent records of
oyster production. These localities apparently can support good
oyster growth but, for whatever reason, do not have a regular,
surviving spat set. One of the chief advantages of oyster farming
would be to use currently unproductive areas to increase the overall
oyster harvest.
Economic Considerations
The economics of oyster culture in Alabama are not well known.
Buying or producing larvae and buying spat are costs that traditional
oyster harvesters normally do not have. If oysters are kept in
bags, the cost of bags and the support system (racks or belts)
as well as the cost of labor to sieve and keep the bags clean
must be considered. As in any business, the income has to justify
the cost.
Legal Considerations
The bay bottom belongs to the state of Alabama. Bay bottoms
can be leased from the state for oyster production, but the Corps
of Engineers must approve any structures put into the Bay (pilings,
racks, and any planting of shell or live oysters).
Waterfront property owners can plant and grow oysters to a
distance of 600 yards from shore. This right can only be exercised
after providing a survey of the area by a registered surveyor
to the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources,
Marine Resources Division, and marking the boundaries at the corners
of the area and at 600-feet intervals. The Corps of Engineers
regulations would still apply to any out of the ordinary structures
placed on the bottom. Areas within 600 yards of the shore that
are classified as natural reefs cannot be used under this procedure.
Public Health Considerations
Oysters can only be harvested from areas approved by the Alabama
Department of Public Health. Some areas of the bay are regularly
closed to harvesting while others are normally open but are temporarily
closed if water quality declines.
In summary many of the basic aspects of oyster farming have
now been tried in Alabama. Questions remain about the economic
feasibility. However, it appears that some forms of oyster farming
could increase oyster production.
This work is partly a result
of research sponsored by NOAA, Office of Sea Grant, Department
of Commerce, under Grant No. NA16RG0155-02.
For more information, call your county Extension
office. Look in your telephone directory under your county's name
to find the number.
For more information, contact your county Extension office. Visit http://www.aces.edu/counties or look in your telephone directory under your county's name to find contact information.
Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work in agriculture and
home economics, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, and other related
acts, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The Alabama
Cooperative Extension System (Alabama A&M University and Auburn
University) offers educational programs, materials, and equal
opportunity employment to all people without regard to race, color,
national origin, religion, sex, age, veteran status, or disability.
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