When disease concerns shut down the out-of-state supply of seed oysters for South Carolina’s newly-created oyster farming industry in 2014, the S.C. Sea Grant Consortium provided technical assistance for the establishment of a hatchery at Lady’s Island Oyster near Beaufort. This hatchery now supplies much of the oyster production seeds in the state, which reduces supply chain vulnerabilities and lowers the risk of importing diseases. The amount of of farmed oysters in the state grew from 139,178 in 2014 to over 1.2 million in 2019, according to the S.C. Department of Natural Resources. In 2020, production dropped slightly due to restaurants closing during the COVID-19 pandemic
The mariculture industry provides economic diversification to coastal communities as well as environ...
The Coastal Resources documents from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources provides his...
The Great Wicomico River is a small, trap-type estuary on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay th...
The Coastal Resources documents from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources provides his...
Most of the seed oysters planted on private grounds along the Atlantic Coast of the United States ar...
The South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium publishes Coastal Heritage, a quarterly publication that cov...
The once strong North Carolina oyster fishery has fallen on hard times over the last few decades due...
The Coastal Resources documents from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources provides his...
The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources published a series of educational webpages and br...
The 243,000 acres of Virginia\u27s public oyster reefs (a.k.a. the Baylor Grounds) have been extreme...
The South Carolina Department of Agriculture publishes the bi-monthly Market Bulletin newsletter. Th...
Oyster farming is one of the oldest aquaculture industries in Australia and, in New South Wales (NSW...
This powerpoint presentation gives an overview of oysters and the oyster industry in South Carolina
The Eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is important to the North Carolina economy, ecology, and ...
MSX is a microscopic parasite that kills oysters but is not harmful to humans. It is a protozoan, or...
The mariculture industry provides economic diversification to coastal communities as well as environ...
The Coastal Resources documents from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources provides his...
The Great Wicomico River is a small, trap-type estuary on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay th...
The Coastal Resources documents from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources provides his...
Most of the seed oysters planted on private grounds along the Atlantic Coast of the United States ar...
The South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium publishes Coastal Heritage, a quarterly publication that cov...
The once strong North Carolina oyster fishery has fallen on hard times over the last few decades due...
The Coastal Resources documents from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources provides his...
The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources published a series of educational webpages and br...
The 243,000 acres of Virginia\u27s public oyster reefs (a.k.a. the Baylor Grounds) have been extreme...
The South Carolina Department of Agriculture publishes the bi-monthly Market Bulletin newsletter. Th...
Oyster farming is one of the oldest aquaculture industries in Australia and, in New South Wales (NSW...
This powerpoint presentation gives an overview of oysters and the oyster industry in South Carolina
The Eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is important to the North Carolina economy, ecology, and ...
MSX is a microscopic parasite that kills oysters but is not harmful to humans. It is a protozoan, or...
The mariculture industry provides economic diversification to coastal communities as well as environ...
The Coastal Resources documents from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources provides his...
The Great Wicomico River is a small, trap-type estuary on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay th...