Scallop project approved for Point Judith Pond
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The bay scallop once thrived in Narragansett Bay and the salt ponds,
with Rhode Island one of the top suppliers of scallops to New York in
the 1880s. But generations of overfishing, pollution and a catastrophic
brown tide in the 1980s wiped out the scallop population.
A program led by Save The Bay, which started in 2007 and is being
expanded to include Point Judith Pond this summer, could change things.
The
state Coastal Resources Management Council this month approved a plan
by Save The Bay to install 70 cages in Point Judith Pond loaded with a
brood stock of 20,000 scallops. They will be deployed in May and dive
teams will check artificial spat collectors later this year to see if
spawning has occurred.
Similar efforts have shown positive
results in other salt ponds, including Ninigret and Quonochontaug ponds,
according to Save The Bay’s application with the CRMC. Point Judith
Pond was chosen for its available habitat, water depth, water quality
and an abundance of dissolved oxygen.
Read the complete story at South County Independent.
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