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The Shellfish Resource in a Polluted Tidal Inlet

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Thomas Hruby
Affiliation:
Senior Scientist, Massachusetts Audubon Society, Lincoln, Massachusetts 01773, USA; Resources for Cape Ann, 159 Main Street, Gloucester, Massachusetts 01930, U.S.A.

Extract

In the City of Gloucester, Massachusetts, 30% of the Soft-shell Clam (Mya arenaria) beds in a tidal inlet known as the Annisquam River are not harvestable owing to the discharges of untreated sewage from the surrounding area. A large proportion of the total area of the clam-flats has been closed to clamming because of exceedingly high levels of coliform Bacteria in the clams and in the water. These polluted areas represent a ‘loss’ of resources for the community, and they were surveyed in 1980 to determine the number and value of Clams which could have been harvested if only the sewage discharges had been controlled.

In the productive areas of the closed-to-fishing flats, which totaled 25.9 ha, the densities of Clams larger than 2.5 mm were found to be statistically the same on the 9 flats sampled and averaged 122.3 per m2. The average number of legally harvestable Clams (those with shells more than 51 mm in length) was 23.3 per m2, and the total yield that could have been harvested in 1980 was estimated at 6 × 106 Clams. Assuming that only 50–60% of the Clams would actually have been harvested in a year (i.e. 3.2 × 106 animals), the local community lost $332,400 in retail sales alone for lack of adequate sewage treatment facilities. Locally, 70% of the harvest goes into the restaurant trade where a bushel (35.2 1), which contains some 1,600 animals, retails for $210, and 30% is sold fresh at $64 per bushel.

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1981

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References

REFERENCES

Council on Environmental Quality (1979). Tenth Annual Report of the Council on Environmental Quality. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: xlii + 816 pp.Google Scholar
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