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Helping bays become ‘a better spot’ for oysters – and farmers

New England’s coastal waters were once filled with oyster reefs. Yet after centuries of overfishing, pollution, and disease, the number of reefs has trended closer and closer to zero. 

Oyster farmers also face challenges: surplus “big uglies,” which are oversize oysters rejected by restaurants, and sudden economic jolts like the pandemic, which closed oyster bars in 2020. 

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A partnership between conservationists and oyster farmers is expanding after a promising start. The project helps rebuild wild oyster reefs and provides reliable income to farmers.

Conservationists and oyster farmers have teamed up to help each other through a project that aims to boost dwindling wild oyster populations and provide farmers with a dependable income source. The Supporting Oyster Aquaculture and Restoration project launched in 2020, led by The Nature Conservancy and The Pew Charitable Trusts. Boosted by initial successes, the program will further expand to sites with an extra $6.3 million in funding over the next four years. 

In New Hampshire, Laura Brown, one of the oyster farmers participating in the project, praises the difference it’s made in Great Bay, a tidal estuary near the coastal border with Maine. 

“It’s the perfect partnership,” says Ms. Brown, owner of Fox Point Oysters. It “makes the whole bay a better spot,” she says, with cleaner water and a better habitat for oysters. 

The sun sparkles on the surface of Great Bay, the silt suspended in the murky water from the previous day’s rainfall. But from her spot on the dock, Brianna Group doesn’t notice. Head tilted down, hands in rubber work gloves, she meticulously counts baby oysters. She and her team of conservationists don’t have a moment to waste. The oyster farmers are coming. 

“This one has seven,” says Ms. Group, a program manager for The Nature Conservancy in Great Bay, a tidal estuary close to New Hampshire’s coastal border with Maine. She holds up a shell with baby oysters, known as “spat,” attached and rapidly fills dozens of giant, flat mesh cages. The baby oysters were grown in water tanks steps away at the University of New Hampshire’s estuarine laboratory. 

Suddenly, as if on cue, a skiff approaches the dock, carrying sisters Laura Brown and Krysten Ward, arriving to transport the baby oysters to their nearby aquaculture farms. “If we make space, I think we can take all of them in one trip. We need to get these in the water,” Ms. Brown says.  

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

A partnership between conservationists and oyster farmers is expanding after a promising start. The project helps rebuild wild oyster reefs and provides reliable income to farmers.

These oysters are not for eating. Instead, they are part of a partnership that brings aquaculture farmers and conservationists together to help boost dwindling oyster populations and provide farmers with a dependable income. The collaboration has proven successful enough that The Nature Conservancy and its partners have dedicated $6.3 million in additional funding to further scale the program over the next four years. 

“It’s the perfect partnership,” says Ms. Brown, who is a former artist turned owner of Fox Point Oysters, a small aquaculture farm located in the waters of Great Bay. “The Nature Conservancy getting involved in oyster restoration and partnering with us for that just makes the whole bay a better spot,” with cleaner water and a better habitat for oysters, she says. 

Alfredo Sosa/Staff

Oyster farmer Laura Brown stands on her boat after loading juvenile oysters at the University of New Hampshire’s Jackson Estuarine Laboratory dock, Aug. 9, 2023, in Durham, New Hampshire.

Replenishing a lost population

New England’s coastal waters were once filled with oyster reefs. Yet after centuries of overfishing, pollution, and disease, the number of reefs has trended closer and closer to zero. 

Native oysters in Great Bay were decimated from more than 25 million in 1993 to around 1.2 million in 2000, a 95% loss. Like coral reefs in warmer waters, oyster reefs – clustered together by the hundreds or even thousands – are the foundation of coastal food chains. They protect shorelines, provide shelter for marine life, and are natural water filters. A single adult oyster can filter up to 50 gallons of water a day.

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