University leading $14 million effort to produce more resilient oysters

University leading  million effort to produce more resilient oysters
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The  University of Louisiana at Lafayette is steering a $14 million,  three-year research initiative to develop oyster broodstock capable of  survival in low-salinity environments.

Leveraging Opportunities and Strategic Partnerships to Advance  Tolerant Oysters for Restoration, or LO-SPAT, is designed to help  sustain populations of the shellfish and support the seafood industry.  The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries is funding the  project.

Dr. Beth Stauffer, an associate professor in UL Lafayette’s Department of Biology,  is LO-SPAT’s principal investigator. Stauffer, a phytoplankton  ecologist, and other UL Lafayette researchers are collaborating with  scientists from the LSU AgCenter and the University of Maryland Center  for Environmental Science Horn Point Laboratory. Spat-Tech, a  Mississippi-based oyster aquaculture company, is the private sector  partner.

“The objective is to examine low-salinity tolerant populations of  oysters. We’re researching how low salinity – and other environmental  stressors – factor in, and identifying heritable traits that make some  oysters hardier than others,” Stauffer said.

The LO-SPAT team is  pooling its expertise in coastal and restoration ecology, environmental  monitoring, organismal and molecular biology, economics, and aquaculture  and oyster husbandry. Researchers are collectively examining the entire  oyster life cycle, from larvae and broodstock to juveniles that can be  deployed in nurseries and, ultimately, at restored reef sites.

Creating sustainable breeding operations starts with collecting wild  oysters, then introducing them to stressors; the next step is using  modern molecular tools to determine which oysters prove capable of  growing in unfavorable conditions. “Those oysters are then bred over  multiple generations through a process known as selective breeding,  which allows producers to build a better oyster using their natural  genetic diversity,” Stauffer explained.

It’s important work. Louisiana is one of the nation’s major  oyster-producing states. Declining production, however, has created  ecological and economic consequences. Increases in rainfall and flooding  in Louisiana and along the Gulf Coast in recent years have introduced  high amounts of freshwater into oyster habitats and reefs. That’s  problematic, since the shellfish need at least some salt to live and  more to grow and reproduce.

Jack Montoucet, secretary of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and  Fisheries, said the LO-SPAT initiative provides “a comprehensive  approach to addressing a state, regional and national problem, and we’re  excited play a role in that.”

“Developing an oyster that can tolerate low salinity for an extended  period of time – which we don’t have now – is important to maintaining  the industry as we know it. And with all of the research capabilities  that exist today, we should be able to do that.”

Oysters are essential to coastal ecosystem health. They filter  massive volumes of water and build reefs that provide habitat for fish  and other marine life. The shellfish are also vital to the economy and  provide thousands of jobs. The Gulf of Mexico produces 46% of the  oysters in the United States, and the regional oyster industry has an  annual value of $66 million.

It’s why pursuing initiatives – such as LO-SPAT – that will ensure a  vibrant oyster industry has become a priority in Louisiana. Promoting  sustainable ecosystems and providing habitats for commercial industries  is a primary goal of the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority’s  Coastal Master Plan.

Findings generated as a result of the LO-SPAT initiative are integral  to that effort. So, too, are UL Lafayette research laboratories,  including at its 50-acre Ecology Center. The center has a 15,000-square-foot building that houses spaces for a broodstock facility and laboratory.

Construction and operations of broodstock facilities at the Ecology  Center is being overseen by a team of staff members. In addition to  innovations in oyster broodstock, researchers will conduct field  sampling using sensors deployed in estuaries to characterize the  environments oysters are experiencing and acoustic monitoring to  quantify oyster reef health.

Other key LO-SPAT researchers include Dr. Megan La Peyre, a research  biologist for the U.S. Geological Survey Louisiana Fish and Wildlife  Cooperative Research Unit at the LSU AgCenter; Dr. Louis Plough, an  associate professor and geneticist at the University of Maryland Center  for Environmental Science Horn Point Laboratory; Dr. Durga Poudel, a  geosciences professor in UL Lafayette’s Ray P. Authement College of Sciences; Dr. Natalia Sidorovskaia, a professor who heads UL Lafayette’s Department of Physics; and Dr. Geoffrey Stewart, an associate professor in UL Lafayette’s B.I. Moody III College of Business Administration;

Learn more about the LO-SPAT initiative.

Photo caption: UL Lafayette is steering the $14  million, three-year LO-SPAT research initiative to develop oyster  broodstock capable of survival in low-salinity environments. Scientists  are examining heritable traits that make some oysters hardier than  others; they are conducting research in campus laboratories, in the  field and at UL Lafayette’s Ecology Center, shown above. Pictured are  Andre Daugereaux, the center’s operations manager, and Emma Weiser, an  oyster husbandry technician for the project. Photo credit: Doug Dugas / University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Original source can be found here.



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