“We wanted to learn from the historical mistakes we made, not throw the shell away, not have it end up in landfills, but rather put it back into the bays,” he said.īy this weekend, the American Littoral Society expects to complete the first round of dropping oyster bags into the water. While the recycling campaign directly supplemented the Operation Oyster program, Dillingham said it also helped with another facet of conservation. “If there’s something important we can do out here to clean up these waters, it benefits all of us,” Douty said.ĭouty continued, saying that once more restaurant owners find out about the project, “I think we’re going to get a lot more participants.” He was also the one driving around and picking them up. With the help of Doug Douty, an American Littoral Society trustee and owner of the Lusty Lobster, a seafood wholesaler and distributor based in Highlands, thousands of oyster shells were recycled from about 20 restaurants along the Jersey Shore.įollowing the “Shuck it, Don’t Chuck It!” campaign, Douty provided area restaurants with buckets for restaurant staff to toss the used shells into after being bussed off tables. The bags will rest above the riverbed so no silt or debris interferes with the study. American Littoral Society staff members drop an oyster shell bag off of a private dock in Red Bank. In recent years, pollution from feces and pesticide runoff has found its way into the rivers, and the conversation has shifted back to reinstalling the once-critical piece into the Two River ecosystem.Īlthough Dillingham and Van Hemmen said the project was put in motion six to eight months ago, efforts to collect old oyster shells had been ongoing for quite some time. Later in 20, oyster reefs built by NY/NJ Baykeeper in the Navesink River and Keyport Harbor were dismantled by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection after concerns grew over illegal harvesting coupled with the spread of potentially unsafe shellfish. Van Hemmen added that oysters were still a common resident of the Navesink River up until about the 1990s when two different diseases – MSX and Dermo – knocked out reefs just beyond the Cooper’s Bridge, which connects Middletown to Red Bank. Up until the mid-20 th century, Eastern Oysters from the Navesink were harvested regularly and made their way to some of the most lavish New York City restaurants. It would certainly be a coup for both conservationists and homeowners alike who want to see the Navesink and Shrewsbury rivers return to a healthy, stable level. “We know there are living oysters in the river,” Van Hemmen said. It was all the assurance that he and his organization needed to confidently move forward. Pim Van Hemmen, assistant director of the American Littoral Society, said a boater from the Monmouth Boat Club pulled a mushroom anchor up from the river in October and found a healthy Eastern Oyster attached. While the project might seem like a longshot, there have been reports of Eastern Oyster activity in the Red Bank end of the river within the past year. “Somewhere down the road, we would love to see reefs back,” Dillingham said about oyster reefs in the Navesink. Once the project ends in September, nearly 200 bags will be collected from the research. After each examination, a new bag will be hung. Through September, volunteers and society members will check the oyster shell bags once a month for any signs of growth. “We’re going to do as comprehensive a search that we can do,” Dillingham said. American Littoral Society’s executive director Tim Dillingham believes that Operation OysterĬould eventually help bring oyster reefs back into the Navesink River. The success of Operation Oyster is reliant upon three different tenets of oyster examination: understanding their presence, where they exactly are and how many there might be. If oyster spat does exist, then the society expects the grain-of-sand-sized larvae to latch onto the shell bags and begin growing. On June 2, the Society launched Operation Oyster, a summer-long initiative where bags of recycled oyster shells will be hung along nearly 50 private docks spanning Red Bank to Rumson along the Navesink. “Oysters were a really critical part of this ecosystem for years and putting them back in, making them a vital part of the system again, is necessary for restoring the (river’s) health,” said Tim Dillingham, executive director of the American Littoral Society. Oysters are known for their ability to filter massive amounts of water each day, up to 50 gallons. Plans to attract live oyster baby oyster larvae, known as spat, is the key for the next attempt at drastically cleaning the unhealthy Navesink River. RED BANK – The future health of the Two Rivers now hinges upon a seasonal summertime delicacy.
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