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Last updated: May 20, 2008

Northwest District DEP Northwest District - Oyster Restoration Program DEPQuick Links


Oyster Reef Restoration

Oyster reefs are built primarily by the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica. Oyster reefs are built via the successive reproduction and settlement of larvae onto hard structures such as existing oyster reefs, pilings, rocks, downed trees and recycled oyster shell. Thus, with continued settlement and subsequent generational growth, oysters may form massive reef structures in estuarine systems.


Grassy Point Oyster Reef

Oysters are filter feeders, which means they uptake food and oxygen by pumping massive amounts of water across their gills. One adult oyster can filter 50 gallons of water in a 24 hour period!! While feeding, oysters take in viruses, bacteria, phytoplankton, algae, sediments and chemical contaminants found in the water column.  This efficient biological filter increases water clarity by reducing sediment loads and promotes increased water quality by removing chemical contaminants and potentially harmful microorganisms from the water column. Oyster reefs also function as wave breaks and offer shoreline protection from storm events. By breaking powerful wave energy before it reaches the shoreline, oyster reefs play an important role in reducing shoreline erosion.

Oyster reef restoration is essential to returning our estuaries to the thriving ecosystems they once were.  The Ecosystem Restoration Section of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection utilizes recycled oyster shell from several partner restaurants in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties as a hard substrate for oyster reef development. Currently the oyster restoration team has funding from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, NOAA and Florida Coastal Management to restore/create several inter-tidal reefs throughout the Escambia and Santa Rosa watersheds. 

 

Additional Information



 

 

For more information, contact: Amy Baldwin

 

                                                                                               

160 Governmental Center Pensacola, Florida 32502
850-595-8300 (phone) / 850-595-8417 (fax)
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