News Room

Keep up to date with the latest news about us.

Nicole Fuentes
This summer, Seatuck Environmental Association and the Village of Patchogue will be starting a three-year pilot oyster restoration program at Shorefront Park.
Rob Hutchins
Investment into oyster restoration delivers almost double the amount in economic and environmental benefits, a new report has celebrated, adding that for every $1 spent on reef restoration so far, communities have seen as much as $1.70 in return.
Because of Them We Can
She’s already earned a National Geographic award for her work! For years, Mississippi’s Gulf waters have struggled to recover from devastating natural and manmade disasters. From Hurricane Katrina to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the oyster population has been hit hard. But one young trailblazer is working to change that—one oyster at a time, PBS reports.
John Wallace
Virginia has made significant investments in the restoration of oyster reefs in the Chesapeake Bay, and now a study led by William & Mary’s Batten School & VIMS suggests those management practices are literally paying off in the Rappahannock River. The study, recently published in the Journal of Environmental Management, was led by Batten School of Coastal & Marine Sciences Ph.D. student Alexandria Marquardt, who presented the results to the Virginia Marine Resources Commission’s (VMRC) Shellfish Management Advisory Committee on February 19.
James Lane Post
South Fork Sea Farmers, a non profit dedicated to the health of marine environment, announced recently that a new reef will be started in the waters of Accabonac Harbor off Landing Lane.

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