Applied Shellfish Farming Course at RWU

Shared on Behalf of Roger Williams University Center for Economic and Environmental Development
Applied Shellfish Farming Course at RWU to Equip Commercial Shellfish Farmers

“The Roger Williams University Center for Economic and Environmental Development is now enrolling students for Applied Shellfish Farming, a non-credit course offered during the winter/spring semester that teaches both aspiring shellfish farmers and aquaculture professionals the ins and outs of commercially growing oysters, quahogs, and other shellfish species”

To view the 2016 course information click here.

Pre-registration is preferred by contacting Cheryl Francis at (401) 254-3110 or cfrancis@rwu.edu. For more information about the course and a NOAA-funded effort to expand the reach of this course in 2017 through online sessions, please visit: http://www.rismp.org/education/

Commercial Fisheries Research Foundation Research Video

Shared on behalf of the The Commercial Fisheries Research Foundation

The Commercial Fisheries Research Foundation (CFRF) is pleased to announce the release of a documentary video summarizing a recently completed collaborative research project on quahogs in Narragansett Bay. The project was conducted by a team of scientists from Roger Williams University and the University of Rhode Island, managers from the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, and commercial shellfishermen. It was supported through the CFRF’s Southern New England Collaborative Research Initiative (SNECRI), a program funded under NOAA Award #NA08NMF4720595 and made possible through efforts by U.S. Senator Jack Reed.

To view the documentary video please click here.

For more information on this and other CFRF supported projects please click here.

RI clams: some are Notata and some are not

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Dale Leavitt

By Dale Leavitt
Associate Professor & Aquaculture Extension Specialist
Roger Williams University

Question: What’s up with the markings on some RI clams?

The normal “white” quahog that we usually see in the bay are referred to (in science speak) as the “alba” variety. Those with a reddish-brown pattern on their shell are referred to as “notata” variety. Both are normal, native clams that can be found naturally in RI waters. The only difference is that one has a different shell color than the other. It is a simple, natural single locus variation in the genetics of the clam.

Above, a Notata clam with its distinctivereddish-brown markings. Photo by Melissa Devine

Above, a notata clam with its distinctive reddish-brown markings. Photo by Melissa Devine

Normally, the natural population of wild “notata” clams (the ones with the reddish-brown zig-zag pattern on their shell) occur at about 1-2% in the wild. When we breed clams for enhancement, we increase the percentage of those clams by simply crossing notata clams with notata clams. In the wild this does not happen often, for the density of wild notata’s is so low. When we do it in the hatchery, the number of notata clams is about 75% of the total. So when we raise and release clams for enhancement, we can track our clams by counting how many notatas there are in the catch. Anything over 2% means that we are having success with our plantings. For example, the Shellfishermen’s Association planted about 500,000 notata clams in Green’s River (Potowomut) in (about) 2004. When the area opened for fishing three years later, the catch was about 25-30% notata’s, suggesting that our enhancement program was working well.

A large number of the clams that were caught in Galilee during the July 23rd Clamming Class were notatas and they were harvested from an area where the Rhode Island Shellfishermen’s Association have been planting enhancement clams for the past three or four years. So, again, the enhancement program is working. In this case, the fishermen are planting the nursery reared clams there specifically to help out the recreational harvest for the tourists and state residents.

The catch from our July 23rd Clamming Class--A notata clam with alba clams, and a crab for good measure.

The catch from our July 23rd Clamming Class–a few notata clams can be seen alongside the predominant alba clam. Photo by Melissa Devine