Scientists, lawmakers, and those who make their living from Rhode Island’s Narragansett Bay are teaming up to hunt for the reason why quahogs appear to be on the decline.
Quahogs have a long history in the state. The shells of the
large, hard-shelled clam were used by the indigenous Narragansett people as
wampum. The clam itself is a staple of clam chowders and in 1987, the Rhode
Island Legislature designated the quahog the official “Rhode Island State
Shell.”
On Tuesday, a special Rhode Island legislative commission
held a hearing to study the reduced catch. The commission is looking at a range
of possible factors that may be contributing to a loss of the signature
shellfish, from oxygen deficiency to changing aquatic life and climate change.
Quahogs — also known as little necks or cherry stones or
chowder clams — are filter feeders drawing nutrients out of water columns. They
don’t move much other than the first 2 to 3 weeks of their lives when they are
larvae, according to Conor McManus, of the Rhode Island Department of
Environmental Management.
Quahogs will traditionally start spawning in mid-June first
in coves along Narragansett Bay and progress through the season. A second large
spawning can occur in July.
There was a peak in the harvest of quahogs in the 1950s
before the dredging of the clams was banned. There was a second peak in the
1980s reflecting an improvement in water quality in the upper bay.
“Since then, we’ve seen a dramatic decline,” McManus said.
There’s also been a decline in the number of people trying
to harvest quahogs from historical highs of more than 1,000 people down to
about 400 people a decade or so ago, and now down to 150 to 200 people, he
said.
McManus said the hunt for an answer to the quahog decline
is complex. As an example, he pointed to events that might cause a drop in
oxygen in the water.
Typically, those hypoxia events are seen as a negative for
organisms, but there is also a competing theory that such episodes could help
quahogs because it might force away potential predators.
“Over the course of a quahog’s life there is a lot of
uncertainty,” he said.
Jim Boyd, a shellfisherman, said that less than half the
number of quahogs is being harvested from Narragansett Bay compared to a decade
ago and he and others who rely on quahogs need answers.
To the industry, it’s pretty clear that while there
may be many factors for the drop, the primary driver is the reduction in
nutrients needed for quahogs to thrive, he said.
“We really need the department and the universities to
focus on this question for us because this industry is taking a significant hit
over the last decade and our concern is that this is going to continue in the
coming years,” Boyd said. “We’re seeing this slow, methodical decline in the
abundance of quahogs throughout the bay.”
Other states along the Atlantic coast have also experienced
declines in both quahogs as well as also oysters, bay scallops and soft-shell
clams, according to McManus.
Quahogs feed on plankton. That also makes them key to the
environment since plankton feeds on nitrates, which water treatment plants
can’t filter out, making quahogs a natural source for filtering impurities out
of the water, as well as being a sought-after food.
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