Partners continue restoring oysters in Southern Maryland.
Some Southern Marylanders refuse to give up on bringing oysters back to their local waters. On Sept. 10, volunteers teamed up to plant an estimated 1 million juvenile oysters, or spat, on a sanctuary reef in Breton Bay, an offshoot of the Potomac River in St. Marys County.
Breton Bay once hosted a dozen shucking houses and seafood-processing businesses, but over the decades overfishing, pollution and disease took their toll. In 2018, the state Department of Natural Resources briefly considered Breton Bay as one of five Chesapeake Bay tributaries in Maryland to undergo large-scale reef restoration. But DNR dropped Breton Bay in favor of the Manokin River on the Eastern Shore after surveys found no oysters, living or dead, on Bretons bottom.
Undeterred, the Friends of St. Clements Bay, a neighboring embayment, have plugged away the past several years, annually planting batches of oysters in the Breton sanctuary that about 45 waterfront residents have raised in cages tied to their docks.
This year, with the help of grants secured by the St. Marys River Watershed Association, they contracted with a local oyster farm, Shore Thing Shellfish, to produce a larger batch of spat from larvae spawned at the states Horn Point hatchery in Cambridge.'
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