Combined
landings between 1980 and 2010 dropped by 85 percent
NOAA
Northeast Fisheries Science Center
Researchers
studying the sharp decline between 1980 and 2010 in documented landings of the
four most commercially-important bivalve mollusks -- eastern oysters, northern
quahogs, softshell clams and northern bay scallops -- have identified the
causes.
Warming
ocean temperatures associated with a positive shift in the North Atlantic
Oscillation (NAO), which led to habitat degradation including increased
predation, are the key reasons for the decline of these four species in
estuaries and bays from Maine to North Carolina.
The
NAO is an irregular fluctuation of atmospheric pressure over the North Atlantic
Ocean that impacts both weather and climate, especially in the winter and early
spring in eastern North America and Europe.
Shifts in the NAO affect the timing of species' reproduction, growth and availability of phytoplankton for food, and predator-prey relationships, all of which contribute to species abundance. The findings appear in Marine Fisheries Review.
Shifts in the NAO affect the timing of species' reproduction, growth and availability of phytoplankton for food, and predator-prey relationships, all of which contribute to species abundance. The findings appear in Marine Fisheries Review.
"In the past, declines in bivalve mollusks have often been attributed to overfishing," said Clyde Mackenzie, a shellfish researcher at NOAA Fisheries' James J. Howard Marine Sciences Laboratory in Sandy Hook, NJ and lead author of the study.
"We tried to understand the true causes of the decline, and after a lot of research and interviews with shellfishermen, shellfish constables, and others, we suggest that habitat degradation from a variety of environmental factors, not overfishing, is the primary reason."
Northern
Quahogs, American Lobsters Exceptions
Mackenzie
and co-author Mitchell Tarnowski, a shellfish biologist with the Maryland
Department of Natural Resources, provide details on the declines of these four
species.
They also note the related decline by an average of 89 percent in the numbers of shellfishermen who harvested the mollusks. The landings declines between 1980 and 2010 are in contrast to much higher and consistent shellfish landings between 1950 and 1980.
They also note the related decline by an average of 89 percent in the numbers of shellfishermen who harvested the mollusks. The landings declines between 1980 and 2010 are in contrast to much higher and consistent shellfish landings between 1950 and 1980.
Exceptions
to these declines have been a sharp increase in the landings of northern
quahogs in Connecticut and American lobsters in Maine. Landings of American
lobsters from southern Massachusetts to New Jersey, however, have fallen
sharply as water temperatures in those areas have risen.
"A
major change to the bivalve habitats occurred when the North Atlantic
Oscillation (NAO) index switched from negative during about 1950 to 1980, when
winter temperatures were relatively cool, to positive, resulting in warmer
winter temperatures from about 1982 until about 2003," Mackenzie said.
"We suggest that this climate shift affected the bivalves and their associated biota enough to cause the declines."
"We suggest that this climate shift affected the bivalves and their associated biota enough to cause the declines."
Factors
Affecting Decline
Research
from extensive habitat studies in Narragansett Bay, RI and in the Netherlands,
where environments including salinities are very similar to the northeastern
U.S, show that body weights of the bivalves, their nutrition, timing of
spawning, and mortalities from predation were sufficient to force the decline.
Other factors likely affecting the decline were poor water quality, loss of eelgrass in some locations for larvae to attach to and grow, and not enough food available for adult shellfish and their larvae.
Other factors likely affecting the decline were poor water quality, loss of eelgrass in some locations for larvae to attach to and grow, and not enough food available for adult shellfish and their larvae.
"In
the northeast U.S., annual recruitments of juvenile bivalves can vary by two or
three orders of magnitude," said Mackenzie, who has been studying bay
scallop beds on Martha's Vineyard with local shellfish constables and fishermen
monthly during warm seasons for several years.
In late spring-early summer of 2018, a cool spell combined with extremely cloudy weather may have interrupted scallop spawning, leading to what looks like poor recruitment this year. Last year, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard had very good harvests due to large recruitments in 2016.
In late spring-early summer of 2018, a cool spell combined with extremely cloudy weather may have interrupted scallop spawning, leading to what looks like poor recruitment this year. Last year, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard had very good harvests due to large recruitments in 2016.
"The
rates of survival and growth to eventual market size for shellfish vary as much
as the weather and climate," Mackenzie said.
Oyster
Demand Increases
Weak
consumer demand for shellfish, particularly oysters, in the 1980s and early
1990s has shifted to fairly strong demand as strict guidelines were put in
place by the Interstate Shellfish Sanitation Conference in the late 1990s
regarding safe shellfish handling, processing and testing for bacteria and other
pathogens. Enforcement by state health officials has been strict. The
development of oyster aquaculture and increased marketing of branded oysters in
raw bars and restaurants has led to a large rise in oyster consumption in
recent years.
Since
the late 2000s, the NAO index has generally been fairly neutral, neither very
positive nor negative. As a consequence, landings of all four shellfish species
have been increasing in some locations.
Poor weather for bay scallop recruitment in both 2017 and 2018, however, will likely mean a downturn in landings during the next two seasons.
Poor weather for bay scallop recruitment in both 2017 and 2018, however, will likely mean a downturn in landings during the next two seasons.