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  2. Oystering machinery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oystering_machinery

    Filters have different jobs, including making sure there is algae to feed the oyster larvae and cleaning the water to maintain a suitable environment for their growth. In addition to the nursery tank system, small boats and rafts made in Italy are used to gather oysters that cannot be reached by bare foot.

  3. Oyster reef restoration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster_reef_restoration

    The first stage in an oyster’s life cycle is the free-swimming larval stage. After about three weeks, the larva attaches to a hard substrate—surface area to attach to—such as prop roots, dock pilings, natural rock, and other oysters becoming an oyster spat—oysters that have just settled to the bottom. [4]

  4. Oyster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster

    using waste oyster shells to elevate the reef floor 25–45 cm (9.8–17.7 in) to keep the spat free of bottom sediments; building larger reefs, ranging up to 8.1 ha (20 acres) in size; disease-resistant broodstock [45] The "oyster-tecture" movement promotes the use of oyster reefs for water purification and wave attenuation.

  5. Billion Oyster Project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billion_Oyster_Project

    Billion Oyster Project is a New York City-based nonprofit organization with the goal of engaging one million people in the effort to restore one billion oysters to New York Harbor by 2035. Because oysters are filter feeders , they serve as a natural water filter, with a number of beneficial effects for the ecosystem. [ 1 ]

  6. Ostrea lurida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostrea_lurida

    Ostrea lurida, common name the Olympia oyster, after Olympia, Washington in the Puget Sound area, is a species of small, edible oyster, a marine bivalve mollusk in the family Ostreidae. This species occurs on the northern Pacific coast of North America .

  7. Oyster reef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster_reef

    The term oyster reef refers to dense aggregations of oysters that form large colonial communities. Because oyster larvae need to settle on hard substrates, new oyster reefs may form on stone or other hard marine debris. Eventually the oyster reef will propagate by spat settling on the shells of older or nonliving oysters. The dense aggregations ...

  8. Water aeration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_aeration

    Similar options have been proposed to help rehabilitate the Chesapeake Bay where the principal problem is lack of filter-feeding organisms such as oysters responsible for keeping the water clean. Historically the Bay's oyster population was in the tens of billions, and they circulated the entire Bay volume in a matter of days.

  9. Oyster farming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster_farming

    Oyster farming is an aquaculture (or mariculture) practice in which oysters are bred and raised mainly for their pearls, shells and inner organ tissue, which is eaten. Oyster farming was practiced by the ancient Romans as early as the 1st century BC on the Italian peninsula [1] [2] and later in Britain for export to Rome. The French oyster ...