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Texas Legalized Oyster Farms

October 28, 2019 in Oyster Farming

Sometimes its better to share the news than to recreate. Source: HoustoniaMag.com by Gwendolyn Knapp

Read Full Article Here!

Excerpts: “We haven’t needed to farm oysters because we have a viable -oyster industry. The Gulf Coast—primarily Texas and Louisiana—produced 51 percent of all oysters in America in 2017, and the 2018–19 wild-oyster season was the strongest in several years.”

…over the past decade Texas has lost a good portion of its natural reefs—those in Galveston Bay alone have decreased by more than half—thanks to both acts of God and over-fishing. Restoration efforts are underway, but they’ll take decades, and hundreds of millions of dollars, to complete. Which is why in 2017 proponents from Texas A&M, the Texas Restaurant Association, the Coastal Conservation Association, and elsewhere began working with legislators and the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department to draft a bill that would legalize oyster farming.

The Harte Research Institute estimates that farmed oysters will soon bring in $2 million a year in Texas. They’ll help keep our bays clean and reduce stress on our natural reefs. They could even bring in tourists one day, like the oyster farms on the East Coast, which attract foodies seeking out new bivalves to try. “That’s an angle we’re looking at, bringing in the community and giving a tour, like a wine vineyard,” says Raz Halili, owner of Prestige Oysters, who plans to give farming a try. As for whether we’ll be able to taste the difference between boutique oysters and those dredged from public reefs? We’re certainly willing to do all the taste-testing required to find out.

Something that was not mentioned was how we have been harvesting oysters. Dredging: a dredge which is towed along the bottom of the sea by a fishing boat in order to collect oysters. Texans have been dredging oysters from the beginning which is a very disruptive method to the natural reefs and habitat species. Changing this alone will make large impact on our reefs. Get excited! We need to take care of our Texas Gulf waters. I know I would like to see cleaner waters and beaches in Texas.

Tourists!? I’d love to know what everyone thinks about that one…livelihood for some, imperative - yet, I know many search for that escape on the Texas Gulf. It will be interesting to see this development and instead of wine+oyster farm tours like our Pacific and Atlantic neighbors it will be beer buckets and oyster shooters!

Tags: Texas, gulf, Gulf oysters
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