Two sides of oyster farming

Oyster harvesting using rakes (top) and sail driven dredges (bottom). From L'Encyclopédie of 1771

Excerpted from from an ecoRI News (ecori.org) article. To read the full article, please hit this link.

Oysters provide food, clean the water, generate jobs and create fish habitat, but shellfish farms have encountered opposition from residents who say they mar the appearance of their views and interfere with their use of the water.

Two recent public presentations on aquaculture focused on restorative aquaculture and how it is used to improve marine ecosystems in the United States and the different ways people perceive aquaculture facilities that grow shellfish. The talks — on March 21 and April 6 — were part of a series of educational webinars organized by the Narragansett Bay Special Area Management Plan (SAMP) of the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC).

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