2014 BOP Oyster Gardening Manual - New York Edition

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OYSTER

GARDENING
MANUAL
ASSOCIATES
Mud Snails
< 1.18 in
Blue Mussels
< 4 in
Slipper Shells
1.5 in
Amphipod
0.03913 in
Mud Tube Worm
< 0.24 in
Golden Star Tunicate
< 0.4 in
Sea Squirts/Tunicates
0.41.2 in
Sponges
< 0.25 in
Barnacles
< 0.25 in
Ribbed Mussel
3.95.11 in
Sand Worm
< 2.36 in
Shore Shrimp
1.52 in
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8
OYSTER
GARDENING
MANUAL
BILLION OYSTER PROJECT
OYSTER GARDENING PROGRAM
FOR SCHOOLS AND
CITIZEN SCIENTISTS
New York City Edition
OYSTER
GARDENING
MANUAL
Copyright 2014
New York Harbor School
All rights reserved
Published by
New York Harbor School
Battery Maritime Building, Slip 7
10 South Street
New York, NY 10004
Graphic Design & Illustration
MTWTF: Boyeon Choi, Virginia Chow, Glen
Cummings, Aliza Dzik, Pedro Gonalves,
Ravena Hengst
Printed in Iceland by
Oddi Printing
Oyster Gardening Manual is a guidebook
produced by New York Harbor School and
Foundation in collaboration with SCAPE
and MTWTF as part of the Rebuild by Design
initiative.
The Urban Assembly New York Harbor School
is located in the heart of New York Harbor,
and is accessible only by ferry, Harbor School
offers a unique, on-water learning experi-
ence for all its students. Students learn to
build and operate boats; spawn and harvest
millions of oysters; design submersible,
remotely-operated vehicles; conduct real-life
research; and dive underwater. Students go
on trips, tour colleges, hear and learn from ex-
perts in science and industry, and participate
in the schools on-going oyster restoration
research program. Harbor Foundation is a
502(c)3 non-prot based on Governors Island,
whose missions is to prepare New York City
students for careers in marine science
and technology through the restoration of
New York Harbor.
Rebuild by Design, an initiative of the
Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force and
HUD, is aimed at addressing structural and
environmental vulnerabilities that Hurricane
Sandy exposed in communities throughout
the region and developing fundable solutions
to better protect residents from future
climate events. Because of the enormity of
this challenge, the Rebuild by Design process
was developed to nd better ways of
implementing designs and informing policy.
http://www.rebuildbydesign.org/
NY/NJ Baykeeper is an independent 5013
non-prot with a mission to protect, preserve,
and restore the NY/NJ Harbor Estuary. Since
1989, Baykeeper has served as the citizen
advocate for the bays, streams and shores of
the Hudson-Raritan Estuarystopping pol-
luters, championing public access, inu-
encing land use decisions, educating the
public and preserving and restoring habitat.
Baykeeper works to pursue a healthy
harbor through three core programs: Conser-
vation, Oyster Restoration, and Clean Water
Campaign.
SCAPE/LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE PLLC is a
design-driven landscape architecture
and urban design studio based in New York.
SCAPE is a certied WBE with LEED-accredit-
ed professionals on staff. SCAPE shares a
commitment to innovative design and
construction of the urban landscape. Living,
Growing Breakwaters is the SCAPE team
proposal for the Rebuild By Design initiative.
This project proposes the restoration of
living reef ecosystems to the South Shore of
Staten Island for risk reduction, enhanced
waterfront recreation, and increased shore-
line education and stewardship.
MTWTF is a graphic design studio specializ-
ing in environmental signage and graphics,
identity systems, interactive design and pub-
lication platforms. MTWTF creates strategic
communication objects that make complex
information more accessible.
4
INTRODUCTION
History of the NY Bay Oyster
About the Billion Oyster Project
Five Stages of the BOP Life Cycle
BOP Oyster Gardening Manual
Preparing for the Field Trip
What is Oyster Gardening?
What Each Student Should Know
Background Lessons
BOP Gardening Kit
Dividing the Class into Groups
Recruit Chaperons
Getting Started
Setting Up Your Oyster Garden
Measuring Your Oysters
Where to Put Your Cage
How Deep to Put Your Cage
Securing Your Cage
Monitoring Your Oyster Garden
Variables and Oyster Growth
Field Procedures
Measuring 300 Oysters
Monitoring Living Oysters
Monitoring Dead Oysters
Maintaining Your Cage
De-Fouling Your Cage
Winterizing Your Cage
Tying Proper Knots
Returning Your Cage to the Water
Testing Water Quality
Other Noteworthy Observations
Uploading Data
Appendix
Water Quality Test Kit
Lamotte Water Quality Testing Procedure
Sample Lesson Plan
Oyster Life Cycle and Anatomy
Ecological Services of Oysters
Identifying Aggregating Species
Human Health Advisory
Sources and Credits
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INTRODUCTION
8
9
HISTORY OF THE NY BAY OYSTER
When Europeans rst arrived on the island of Manhattan in the early
17th century, oysters were literally everywhere. Oyster reefs, or
massive conglomerates of individual oysters growing on top of one
another, covered more than 260,000 acres of our shoreline. This
means that oysters covered the vast majority of the estuary and
formed the basis of its ecology and economy. Oysters were the rst
commodities that the native Lenape exchanged with the Europeans.
They were easy to harvest and a cheap source of food for all. The
oyster economy of New York lasted for more than 300 years feeding
the rich and poor alike. By its peak in 1860 more than 120 million
oysters were sold in city markets and exported annually, making NYC
the oyster trading capital of the world.
Throughout the 18th century oysters harvested from the South
Shore of Staten Island and coastal inlets of Brooklyn, Queens, and
Manhattan were a staple of all New Yorkers diets and exported
across the country. Thousands of New Yorkers worked in the boom-
ing oyster industry. Small scale oystermen harvested wild oysters
by hand using at bottom boats and large wooden tongs. The wild
oysters were then brought ashore and sold to wholesalers, shucking
houses, restaurants, and countless oyster stands that lined the
streets of lower Manhattan throughout the 1800s.
By 1820 however, after more than a century of continuous harvest,
New Yorkss native oyster beds had become exhausted. After the
abolition of slavery in 1827 in New York state, free blacks from the
Chesapeake came to settle the South Shore of Staten Island and
brought in their seed oysters to replant the local beds. John Jackson
was the rst to purchase land in the Rossville area and led the
establishment of Sandy Ground, the oldest community of free blacks
in the United States.
Because of the efforts of the men and women of Sandy Ground,
by the mid 1830s, the oyster industry in Staten Island was once again
thriving. Along with it, the shipbuilding and ship repair industry of
Tottenville also began to ourish. Throughout the 1800s, Tottenville
was home to more than half a dozen shipyards. Unfortunately, by
1890 the oyster industry was once again in decline, due primarily to
industrial pollutants and sewage. In 1916, after numerous outbreaks
of cholera and other diseases linked to sewage contamination, the
New York City Department of Health declared all waters of the NY Bay
ofcially closed to shell-shing. For the next 50 years, the water
quality and ecological health of NY Harbor continued to deteriorate.
At times the Harbor was so oxygen-deprived and acidic that almost
nothing could survive, not even the hardy oyster. But beginning in the
10
18001850
Eastern oysters were harvested from native
beds, primarily Great Beds and Chingarora
Beds in Raritan Bay. Oysters were tonged and
dredged by hand. By the 1800s native oyster
beds were already in decline.
Im making
my living
pulling up
oysters!
I remember, 10 years
ago, it was way easier to
harvest these oysters.
early 1960s, with the advent of modern sewage treatment plants, this
situation began to change. Since the passing of the Clean Water Act
in 1972, which limits the amount of pollution and sewage permissible
in the harbor, water quality has improved dramatically within the
Hudson Raritan Estuary. Today there are 14 sewage treatment plants
in NYC capable of treating all of the citys 1.7 billion gallons of waste-
water per day in dry conditions. Unfortunately, because there is only
one pipe that combines storm-water and household waste, the entire
system overows whenever it rains more than a quarter inch in 24
hours, dumping raw sewage directly into the harbor. Despite this fact,
NYCs waters are the cleanest they have been in the past 100 years. In
the last decade scientists and naturalists alike have watched in awe
as many aquatic species, including the mighty oyster, once thought to
18501900
Oyster leases were created in Raritan Bay,
where seed oysters were brought in from Long
Island and grown in the Bays shallow waters.
Native beds declined due to over-harvesting
and water quality. Oysters were stored in
drinking creeks prior to nal sale until the
late 1890s. Soft and hard clam harvest were
limited to wading depths and intertidal
shorelines.
11 History
19001950
In 1900 mechanized dredge boats enabled
more efcient harvesting of oysters. Oyster
aquaculture declined due to pollution and
sedimentation. The oyster industry collapsed
by 1925 due to human health hazard and
population decline.
Back in the
day, there used
to be so many
oysters
I wonder
what happened
to the oysters
that used to be
here?
My school
is growing
oysters in
the Bay!
1950Today
Oyster culture is not a viable industry due to
population decline and water quality.
Restoration reefs have been constructed at
limited sites within the bay and a larger area
has been identied by the US ARMY Corps
of Engineers Comprehensive Restoration Plan
for Hudson-Raritan Estuary as suitable
oyster habitat. Water quality has signicantly
improved since the 1970s but wastewater
efuent and industrial contamination from
Arthur Kill are still concerns.
be lost for good, are returning to our local waters. With the help of
oyster gardeners, scientists, mariners, and all concerned residents
of the city, a movement for ecological restoration of the NY Harbor
has ofcially begun. If we continue to improve our physical systems
sewage, storm-water, and green buildingsand educate more people
about the life of the estuary and how to help restore it, the 21st
Century may once again give rise to the city (re)built by the oyster.
Dont call it a
come back!
12
13
ABOUT THE BILLION OYSTER PROJECT (BOP)
BOP is Harbor Schools long-term, large-scale plan to restore one
billion live oysters to New York Harbor over the next twenty years
and in the process educate thousands of young people in New York
City to restore the ecology and economy of their local marine
environment. BOP is a partnership of schools, businesses,
nonprots, and individuals all working together to grow oysters and
make our city a healthier and more resilient place to live. This
partnership also includes local, state, and federal regulatory agen-
cies with whom we work closely to certify and monitor our
aquaculture methodology and ongoing habitat restoration projects.
School-based oyster gardening is an integral component of the
Billion Oyster Project. Students as restoration scientists contribute
to BOP in two main ways. Students help BOP to answer key scientic
questions about urban estuary restoration. They do this by
growing and monitoring oysters in diverse locations and microniches
around the Harbor. Student scientists try to answer questions
such as: where do native oysters grow best in a highly urbanized
estuary? What site conditions (marine, atmospheric, terrestrial) are
commonly associated with oyster growth? What organisms
(predators and associates) are commonly found in and around oys-
ter restoration sites? What atmospheric conditions inuence
oyster growth? These questions require long term research and prof-
essional commitment from students, teachers, and schools.
The second major contribution of school based oyster gardening is
simply to increase the total number of breeding adult oysters
in the ecosystem. While 500 oysters in cage may seem insignicant
when compared to the projects goal of one billion, each breeding
female is capable of producing up to 25 million eggs every time she
spawns (two or three times per summer). In a semi-enclosed
embayment with one or two gardens this can lead to tens of millions
of fertilized larvae swimming about looking for a place to call
home. The more gardens we install the more likely the larvae will
successfully nd substrate and metamorphose into oysters.
Each BOP garden is both a research experiment and a tangible
contribution to restoration. Every BOP school extends the message
and the practice of stewardship. In our hope that BOP fosters a
lifelong appreciation in all students for the principles and practice of
environmental stewardship.
Oysters reef
attenuate waves
Oysters lter plankton,
contaminants and detritus
Oysters remove
excess nitrogen,
cycle nutrients
and improve water
quality
Oysters reefs provide
habitat for
marine species
Oyster reefs
facilitate submerged
aquatic vegetation
One oyster
lters 24 gallons
of water a day
in optimal
conditions
14 14
15 About BOP
OYSTERS AS ECOSYSTEM
ENGINEERS
The eastern oyster or American Oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is the
only species of oyster found along the U.S. East Coast. Crassostrea
virginica ranges from St. Lawrence Bay in Canada south to the
Yucatan Peninsula in the Gulf of Mexico, and can be found as far aeld
as the West Indies and Brazil. The species most commonly occurs in
coastal (estuary and bay) waters and is well known for forming exten-
sive reef systems both intertidally and subtidally.
An oyster reef is formed as new generations of oysters grow on top
of one another. Millions of oyster larvae are produced by a single
adult oyster, and there are billions of larvae oating in the water ar-
ound a reef. These microscopic swimming larvae then permanently
attach and grow on nearby shell (parents and neighbors). Over the
years this causes the reef to expand upwards and outwards. These
three-dimensional oyster reef structures provide habitat for a variety
of marine species and play an important role in shoreline stabilization.
As lter feeding organisms, oysters help improve local water quality
by removing suspended sediments and algae, and in so doing they
also play a crucial role in nutrient cycling by removing excess nitrogen
out of the system.
Oysters once formed the dominant habitat type in the Hudson Raritan
Estuary (HRE) providing shelter, food and spawning grounds to over
200 species of aquatic organisms. The HRE encompasses all waters
around New York City and northern New Jersey and is home to one
of the greatest natural harbors in the world, and now also one of the
busiest ports in the entire United States.
16
Hello!
17 About BOP
BECOME A BOP SCHOOL!
New York Harbor together with School and Foundation the NY/NJ
Baykeeper present the BOP Oyster Gardening and Harbor Restoration
Curriculum for Schools.
Through a series of interdisciplinary lesson plans incorporating NYS
Common Core standards, BOP Curriculum is designed to give stu-
dents a place-based education and build their enthusiasm for marine
restoration science and technology. The curriculum provides tea-
chers an adaptable instructional resource that aligns with Common
Core math and science scope and sequence. BOP Curriculum is lev-
eled for middle school but can be readily adapted by both elementary
and high school teachers as well. The oyster story of New York is
also a rich and varied theme that exposes students to the history of
their city, marine ecology, statistics, environmental policy and real
life scientic research.
The Oyster Gardening Program in New York City was initially begun
by NY/NJ Baykeeper in 1999 to establish a database for documenting
native oyster restoration and local conditions for survivability in
the NY/NJ Harbor Estuary. By enlisting the help of Harbor residents,
the Baykeeper was able to establish an extensive and ongoing
database that has been useful in informing local oyster restoration
activities. Over the years the program has enjoyed wide-spread
participation attracting private individuals and families, community
and civic groups.
18
Record
weather observations
Monitor
oyster growth
Take care of
300 baby oysters
Record water
(surface) conditions
Collect, record
and upload data
Note
aggregating species
19 About BOP
STUDENTS AS RESTORATION SCIENTISTS
The basis of this curriculum is to enable middle school students to
maintain and care for a small cage of approximately 300 baby
oysters (called spat-on-shell) for one to two years. By continuous
monitoring students observe and record oyster growth, mortality
and note aggregating species. Relevant water quality parameters
are also collected. Through this research project, students develop
critical thinking and problem solving skills. They learn to formulate
their own hypo-theses and search for answers using the data they
collect, and they present their conclusions to their peer group at a
school wide symposium. Optionally, teachers can use the
symposium to create a grade 8 exit project which enables students
to research other aspects of marine environmental science and
technology, in addition to restoration of native oysters in New York
Harbor.
This hands-on teaching approach allows students to gain direct
experience with scientic procedures and career elds pertaining
directly to the biology, technology, policy, and economics of the
estuary. By bringing this program to middle school students BOP
hopes to inspire and equip them to become the next generation of
policy makers, scientists, stewards and advocates of the harbor.
20
Stage 1: The Hatchery
Stage 2: Shell Recycling
Stage 4: Grow-Out
Stage 5: Reef Building
Stage 3: Remote Setting
21
FIVE STAGES OF THE BOP LIFE CYCLE
The following pages depict the ve stages of the life cycle of BOP.
These are illustrated technical diagrams. They show almost all the
activities involved in the project, from production to education
to restoration. Each of the ve phases takes place in unique loca-
tion(s) around Governors Island and New York Harbor. BOP offers
guided tours of the hatchery and other facilities on Governors Island
to motivated school groups. Contact us if you and your students are
interested in setting up an educational workshop and tour of the
BOP facilities ([email protected]).
Stage 1: The Hatchery
BOP breeds and spawns wild oysters in the lab to produce
hundreds of millions of larvae for the remote-setting process.
(@ Harbor School MAST Center)
Stage 2: Shell Recycling
BOP collects thousands of pounds of shell per week from local
restaurants to use as growing medium for new oysters.
(@ restaurants and GI/Earth Matter)
Stage 3: Remote Setting
The process of seeding recycled shell with millions of lab grown
oyster larvae in large seawater lled tanks.
(@ GI Pier 101)
Stage 4: Grow-Out
Baby, spat-on-shell oysters are grown out in oating trays or school
gardens for 1-2 years before being transferred to reefs.
(@ BOP school gardens and oating nurseries)
Stage 5: Reef Building
The nal stage in the restoration process, mature oysters are
planted on reef restoration sites around the harbor using various
structures and techniques. (@ multiple restoration sites)

20C
22
Cylindrical
tanks
1
3
2
Each female
produces 10
to 25 million
eggs per
spawning.
Female
Sunlight
CO
The Perfect
Oyster
Farm Raised
Oyster
Wild
Oyster
Up to 20%
hopefully
90% will be
successfully
fertilized.
Male
Pre-harvested
gamete
Oysters eat algae
in this case
three species of
phytoplankton. Algae
is cultured using
only sunlight, starter
culture, and small
amounts of nutrient
solution (mineral).
The rst
step in the
hatchery
process is to
grow oyster
food.
Secondly, you
need to choose
what kind of
oysters you
want to breed.
Hello, ready to grow
some oysters?
Thirdly, you need to trick the
oysters into thinking its
spring by increasing the water
temperature and adding some
pre-harvested gamete.
Then voila the oysters
start spawning en mass!
STAGE 1
23 BOP Lifecycle
Larvae growing a foot.
4
Transfer the
male and
female
gametes to
the larvae
tanks for
fertilization
After 2 3 weeks of
growth larvae develop
a foot and begin active
locomotion in search
of a permanent place
to settle. The biggest
larvae are ltered out
and transferred to
remote setting tanks.
Oyster larvae spend
approximately 2
weeks in the feeding
tank. Algae is
continually added
in precise amounts
to maintain a
steadily increasing
food supply for the
developing oyster
larvae.
Hey, hows
your algae
culture?
Algae culture is very
delicate. If you dont
monitor carefully
your algae culture
can collapse.
Hi, Im
pouring
some
nutrient
solution!
And now we
have hundreds of
millions of larvae!
Its smelly!
24
STAGE 2
Hey, restaurant goers!
Did you know oysters
will settle on nearly
any hard surface.
However they prefer the
chemical and physical
composition of oyster
shell. Importing oyster
shell for this purpose is
too expensive therefore
a major part of the BOP
is to collect spent shell
from local restaurants.
Now off to the
Governors Island!
Please throw
the shells in
the collecting
bin, sir!
Once the shells
are collected they
are brought back
to our outdoor
curing facility on
Governors Island.
25 BOP Lifecycle
BOP shell recycling
program operates weekly
collecting several tons
of mixed shell from
restaurants all across
New York City.
Curing takes at least six
months of exposure to
the elements and periodic
turning of piles. At the end
of the curing period, shells
are washed and prepared
for remote-setting tanks.
I like oysters too!
Thanks EARTH MATTER
for helping us run the
shell recycling program!
26
STAGE 3
Stacks of mesh bags
Stack of trays
First we wash the
cured, recycled oyster
shell reclaimed from
local restaurants.
Shells are
held in place
in the tanks
using mesh
bags, plastic
trays, or
metal cages.
Remote setting
is the process of
adding millions
of lab-grown
larvae to large
dockside tanks
lled with
seawater and
substrate.
27 BOP Lifecycle
After a few days,
larvae quickly settle
and attach ourselves
permanently to shell
surface.
1040% of
the larvae added
to the tank will
successfully
settle and
metamorphose
into oysters.
Each tank holds
up to 50 thousand
recycled shells with
a total of more than
2.5 million individual
oysters after the set.
Any larvae that have
not set on shells after
two days are ltered
out using a sieve and
added back to a tank
that is still undergoing
setting. Once a tank
is fully set then the
pumps are switched to
recirculation mode.
Larvae come from the
Harbor Schools hatchery
or can be imported from
other commercial shellsh
hatcheries in the Northeast.
Now we are
spat-on-shell!
28
STAGE 4
Mushroom anchor
Large mooring buoy
Cage goes 2 ft.
under water
There are up to 250
balls with stack of 4
trays hanging below.
Secure your
cage with
marine line
and a back up
steel cable.
Let me show
you how to
tie a bowline
knot!
Harbor School operates two
large scale oyster nurseries,
one in the Brooklyn Navy Yards
and one on the eastern shore of
Governors Island.
After approximately 2 weeks in
the remote-setting tanks baby
spat-on-shell oysters are ready
to be transferred to nursery
trays and garden cages.
29 BOP Lifecycle
juveniles
juveniles
adults
adults
Spat-on-shell
oysters of various
sizes in tray.
The Governors
Island eco dock
nursery has an
approximate
capacity of
750,000.
Navy Yards currently
contains approximately
750,000 oysters and
has a capacity for up to
2 million.
CSO
(Combined
Sewer Outfall)
Reef castles and reef balls
are made of specially
compounded concrete
with a lower pH closer to
seawater. Reef castles
and reef balls are seeded
with oyster larvae in
remote setting tanks then
placed on the bottom as
miniature reefs.
One approach to ensuring
oysters remain in place
on the bottom in high
energy environments is to
build large metal frames
(called oyster condos)
that can contain thousands
of spat-on-shell and
are themselves habitat
generating structures.
STAGE 5
CONSTRUCTED REEF
STRUCTURES, REEF BALLS
AND OYSTER CONDOS
Green can buoy
34 knot
current
Oyster
condos
Reef castle
s
p
a
t
-
o
n
-
s
h
e
l
l
r
o
c
k
c
l
a
m
s
h
e
l
l
S
h
a
l
l
o
w
w
a
t
e
r
l
e
v
e
l
4ft.
SPAT-ON-SHELL AND
SUBSTRATE MOUNDS
G
I

R
e
e
f

S
c
i
e
n
c
e
P
l
a
t
f
o
r
m
... Simple Reef
Construction!
The layer cake
approach made by
placing riprap (rocks)
on the bottom,
followed by cured
shell and an icing
of spat-on-shell
oysters.
Unfortunately
most of NY Harbor
is characterized by
conditions of high
energy and high
sedimentation.
Directly adjacent to the
reef is a science platform
that collects water quality
data in real time and
monitors the effects of
reef restoration. The
platform consists of
a 1200-lb. cement
block with 3 instruments
attached and cabled to
the surface: the YSI water
quality sensor, the Son-
Tec current proler, and
the VIB live streaming
webcam. The data
are then transmitted
wirelessly to a hosted
database and publicly
accessible web interface.
Now, the most
important part,
rebuilding
self-sustaining
oyster reefs...
This technique works
well in low energy
environments where
waves and tidal energy
will not blow the new
oysters off into the
surrounding muck.
31 BOP Lifecycle
Reef balls
MULTI-SPECIES
RESTORATION
6ft.
Reef castles and reef balls
are made of specially
compounded concrete
with a lower pH closer to
seawater. Reef castles
and reef balls are seeded
with oyster larvae in
remote setting tanks then
placed on the bottom as
miniature reefs.
This complex marine
ecosystem provides habitat
and food for thousands of
species, continuous water
ltration for the Harbor, and a
natural buffer against storms.
One approach to ensuring
oysters remain in place
on the bottom in high
energy environments is to
build large metal frames
(called oyster condos)
that can contain thousands
of spat-on-shell and
are themselves habitat
generating structures.
Multi-Species Restoration!
This is the most comprehen-
sive technique. Historically,
New York Harbor was covered
in more than 200 square miles
of oyster reef, but oyster reef
did not exist by itself. It was
the middle tier of a complex
ecological edge with salt
marsh above and sea grass
meadows below.
Oyster condos are
large metal frames
built from welded rebar
and wire mesh sleeves
or plastic trays that
can contain thousands
of spat-on-shell.
Whenever possible
we try to recreate this
environment. Where
the shoreline is already
softened or naturally
eroded, marsh grass
(Spartina) can be planted
upland of oyster reef
structures. And if the
bottom is sandy enough,
Eelgrass (zostera Marina)
can be planted below the
reef structures.
G
o
v
e
r
n
o
r
s

I
s
l
a
n
d

2
m
i
G
I

R
e
e
f

S
c
i
e
n
c
e
P
l
a
t
f
o
r
m
Directly adjacent to the
reef is a science platform
that collects water quality
data in real time and
monitors the effects of
reef restoration. The
platform consists of
a 1200-lb. cement
block with 3 instruments
attached and cabled to
the surface: the YSI water
quality sensor, the Son-
Tec current proler, and
the VIB live streaming
webcam. The data
are then transmitted
wirelessly to a hosted
database and publicly
accessible web interface.
32
B.O.P.
OYSTER
GARDENING
MANUAL
34
There are lots of
things we need to
do to get ready!
35
WHAT IS OYSTER GARDENING?
BOP oyster gardening is a platform for teaching students environ-
mental science research and fostering a personal connection to our
local marine environment. The goal of the curriculum is to grow more
oysters and to engage students in marine science and stewardship.
BOP oyster gardening is not just about taking eld trips to the
waterfront. At least one week of in-class preparation and training
in scientic monitoring is required before the rst trip takes place.
There are also dozens of related lessons in history, mathematics,
and ELA plus extension activities and research projects that can be
utilized in concert with oyster gardening. The BOP oyster gardening
contract requires that teachers care for and monitor oysters with
their students on a monthly basis. However, these are just the
minimum requirements. It is our hope that all participating teachers
go beyond the minimum to develop their own specialized Harbor
Literacy curriculum based in marine science, policy, mathematics,
ELA, or other subject areas.
New York Harbor Foundation and Harbor School have worked in
partnership with 15 schools and environmental organizations across
the region to develop the oyster gardening manual you have here
and the online BOP curriculum. We hope the resources developed
through this network make it easy and exciting for students and
teachers to access the Harbor and become empowered as stewards
of their own marine backyard. BOP oyster gardening is not an end in
itself, but a point of departure for a integrating New York Harbor
into New York City Schools. It is up to teachers and students to take
it from here.
The rest of this manual covers how to prepare, install, and monitor
oyster gardens in the eld with students.
The manual is designed as a guide for teachers AND as a visual/
technical resource for students. Teachers can cut and paste
anything from the manual directly into their lesson plans or work-
sheets. Teachers can also adapt the monitoring procedures as
needed, as long as the nal data collected remain consistent and
scientically valid. We encourage teachers to communicate with
BOP on a regular basis to share feedback and discuss the pro-
cedures. Contact info can be found on the rst and last page of
the manual.
36
WHAT EACH STUDENT SHOULD
KNOW
Before going into the eld all
students should be familiar with
the principles and practices
of scientic monitoring. Teachers
can use BOP monitoring lessons
to teach the protocols required
for oyster garden monitoring and
water quality testing. Teachers
should prepare students
using these lessons for at least
one week prior to the trip. All
students should be procient in
the following aspects of eld
monitoring:
1. Overview of the Data Sheet:
small group responsibilities,
supplies and equipment,
deliverables.
2. Making Weather Observations
in the Field: (without the use of
instruments).
3. Understanding the Signi-
cance of Tides and How to Read
a Tide Chart
4. Making Water Surface Obser-
vations: Wave height, debris,
pollution, observed visibility, etc.
5. Measuring Oysters: Use of the
caliper; millimeters and centi-
meters; how to nd the umbo to
bill length; 50 oysters per sample;
obtaining the average, minimum,
maximum of the sample.
6. Identifying Mortality: Students
should be familiar with the tap
test.
1. Review data sheet
3. Learn how to read a tide chart
4. Make water surface observations
5. Measure oysters
2. Make weather observations
37 Preparing
7. Identifying Reef Associates:
Review the species ID card
with students; if possible obtain
live samples of some common
species (tunicates, grass shrimp,
shore crabs) and examine in
class under microscopes. See
Reef Associates lesson plan.
8. Water Quality Testing: All
students should be familiar with
the LaMotte water quality test
kit and ecological signicance of
each parameter (see BOP
lessons: Water Quality lesson
plan and worksheets and Water
Quality Data Plotting and
worksheets).
The teacher should identify stu-
dents who demonstrate strong
understanding and dexterity for
water quality testing in class
and designate these students as
group leaders for water quality
testing in the eld.
7. Identify reef associates
8. Test water quality testing
6. Identify mortality
38
BACKGROUND LESSONS
Students should be engaged in
background lessonsecological
history of NY Harbor, the role of
oysters in the estuary, ecology of
oyster reefs, etcfor at least one
week prior to the rst moni-
toring trip. Students should
be engaged for at least one addi-
tional week in eld monitoring
training and the protocols for
completing the oyster gardening
eld data sheet.
Teachers can download back-
ground and training lesson plans
on the BOP website or create
their own. Regardless of whether
teachers create their own lessons
or use BOP related curri-
culum, NY Harbor Foundation will
provide free in-class support
and assist teachers in developing
resources for oyster gardening.
For support and questions,
teachers should contact New
York Harbor Foundation
Restoration Program Manager.
Contact information can be found
on the last page of this manual.
Project PORTS
Curriculum (by
Lisa Calvo)
Booklet 3
Estuarine Food
Web LP
Manhattan
1609: Mapping
the Historical
Ecology of NY
Harbor (The
Welikia Project)
Estuary Mapping
Lesson Plan
Estuary Article
(for Estuary
Mapping LP)
Watershed
Lesson Plan and
Worksheets
Restoration
Lesson Plan and
Worksheets
Project PORTS
Curriculum (by
Lisa Calvo)
Booklet 1
Project PORTS
Curriculum (by
Lisa Calvo)
Booklet 2
Reef Associates
Lesson Plan
Student HRE
Map (for Estuary
Mapping LP)
Oyster
Reproduction
Lesson Plan
Oyster Reef
Function
Lesson Plan and
Worksheets
39 Preparing
BOP OYSTER GARDENING KIT

- oyster cage
- lines and cables
- installation hardware
- calipers
- thermometer
- latex gloves
- dump bottle
- scrub brush
- laminated species ID card
- clipboard
- ve-gallon bucket, lid, and 25
deployment rope
Oyster gardening kit (5x)
YOU BRING
- writing utensils
- camera (if available)
- pocket calculator
- water (for rinsing equipment)
- towels or paper towels
- knife (for cutting lines)
- garbage bags (for collecting
marine debris)
40
OYSTER GARDENING KIT
Please carefully inventory the
contents of your BOP oyster
gardening kit. These materials are
your responsibility. Each item has
a specic purpose for monitoring
and/or maintenance of your
oyster garden.
1. Oyster Cage: Vinyl coated wire
mesh or galvanized aluminum
rectangular cage; enclosure com-
prised of bungee cord and hook;
use zip ties and bungee as enclo-
sure for additional security.
2. Lines and Cables: One 25 ft
marine braided poly line for
primary attachment to pier; one
30 ft vinyl coated in steel cable
as back-up/security attachment.
3. Installation Hardware: 20 zip-
ties for cage closure; 4 galvanized
steel cable clamps for security
line; one in wrench for
tightening cable clamps.
4. Calipers (6 pair): Used for
measuring oyster growth; one
caliper is assigned to each
group of up to ve students; each
group must measure at least 50
oysters; plastic sliding model
(Wilmar W80150).
5. Thermometer: Used for water
and air temperature testing.
6. Latex Gloves: For water quality
testing and species handling.
7. Distilled Water: Required for
salinity test.
1. Oyster cage
3. Installation hardware
4. Calipers
5. Thermometer
2. Lines and cables
6. Latex gloves
41 Preparing
8. Dump Bottle: Small plastic
bottle with lid used for storing
waste solutions from water
quality test kit.
9. Scrub Brush: For cleaning/
de-fouling of the oyster cage.
10. Laminated Species ID Card
(6): For identication of other
species found in and around the
oyster garden; one card per group
of ve students.
11. Clipboard: For eld data
sheet.
12. Five Gallon Bucket, Lid, 25 ft
Deployment Rope: For carrying
other items in kit and water
quality sample extraction; attach
rope to bucket handle with
bowline knot and deploy from
pier.
13. Oyster Gardening Manual:
Weather proof bound copy of this
manual for use in the eld.
14. Water Quality Test Kit (1):
LaMotte Scientic Estuary and
Marine Monitoring kit; includes
chemical test tabs for up to 10
tests of pH, dissolved oxygen,
nitrate, phosphate, salinity, fecal
coliform, turbidity, and temp-
erature; can be operated by 2 to
5 students.
12. Five gallon bucket, lid and rope
7. Distilled water 8. Dump bottle
9. Scrub brush
10. Species ID card 11. Clipboard
13. Oyster Gardening Manual
14. Water quality test kit
OYSTER
GARDENING
MANUAL
42
YOU BRING
1. Writing Utensils: In order to note
your test results and sizes of your
oysters, please bring writing
utensils.
2. Calculator: While measuring
your oysters, you will have to cal-
culate an average of their size.
3. Camera: If you are not sure
about a predator or associate,
while identifying aggregating
species, you can take a picture
and send it to restore@nyharbor.
org.
4. Water: Used for washing and
cleaning.
5. Paper Towels: Used for cleaning.
6. Garbage Bags: Used for clean-
ing before leaving the site.
7. Multitool: If you have one bring a
multitool with needle-nose
pliers in case you have to make
repairs in the eld.
8. Field Notebook: All students
should have their own eld
notebook for taking notes and
observations (additional to the
data sheet).
1. Writing utensils
2. Calculator
3. Camera (if available)
5. Paper towels 4. Water
7. Multitool 6. Garbage bags
8. Field notebook
43 Preparing
DIVIDE CLASS INTO GROUPS
Before the trip, divide your class
into six groups of 3 to 5 students
each.
Each group should be heteroge-
nous, with a range of skills
appropriate for each of the mon-
itoring tasks. Five of the six
groups will carry out oyster
garden monitoring tasks, while
one of the six groups will be
dedicated specically to water
quality testing. If there are ad-
ditional WQ test kits available
then other groups can also carry
out water quality monitoring.
Oyster gardening 5 groups
Water quality testing 1 group
44
It is recommended that the
teacher assign each student a
specic role/function in
monitoring and data collection.
Below are ve roles for each
group:
A. Scribe : Responsible for care-
ful (legible) annotation of all data
on the eld data sheet.
B. Verier: Responsible for nal
check and approval of all data;
submits the eld data sheet
to the teacher; may also be asked
to upload eld data on the BOP
website.
C. Oyster Measurer: Trained in the
use of calipers and oyster meas-
urements; measures and states
measurements for scribe.
D. Species Identier: Identies
and counts all associated
species.
E. Organizer: Ensures that all eld
supplies and equipment are kept
in a neat and orderly fashion
constantly.
F. Water Quality Tester:
Responsible for water quality
testing using the Lamotte estu-
ary kit or other resources
provided; the teacher will assign
water quality testing to one group
of three to four students who
will then conduct all tests before
doing any additional oyster
monitoring.
A. Scribe
B. Verier
C. Oyster measurer
D. Species identier
E. Organizer
F. Water quality tester
45 Preparing
Teacher Adults Student groups
RECRUIT CHAPERONS
Teachers should follow their
schools standard regulations for
eld trips (Chancellors Regula-
tions A-670 for NYC Schools). As
a waterfront activity, a minimum
of three adults, including the
teacher, are required for each
group of up to 30 students.
Because the class will be broken
up into at least ve small groups
for oyster garden monitoring, it
is recommended that the teacher
have at least 3 additional adult
chaperons on the trip, for a total
of 6 adults. Each adult should
be assigned to one small group,
while the teacher should rotate
between groups to answer ques-
tions and ensure proper data
collection.
46
We have to make
sure that the
cage is at least
2 feet under the
water surface!
47
SETTING UP YOUR OYSTER GARDEN
Your oyster garden will be stocked with 300, 500, or 1000 spat-on-
shell oysters, depending on the size of the cage and age/size of your
oysters. You will receive spat-on-shell oysters produced by the
Harbor School hatchery and set in tanks of New York Harbor water.
The oysters may be anywhere from two weeks to two months old
when you receive them. One-month old oysters will range in size
from 2 mm to 20 mm. Typically each shell substrate will contain 10 to
50 individual oyster spat, depending on the size and shape of the
shell and the setting rate of the particular batch. The rst step is to
count out the total number of live oysters. Identifying oyster spat
smaller than 1 cm can be tricky. It is possible to confuse oyster spat
with barnacle spat.
The next step is to measure the oysters in the garden in order to ob-
tain a baseline for growth rate. The most accurate way to do this is to
measure ALL of the oysters in your cage immediately after receiving
them. Measuring 300 oysters takes less than 30 minutes with one
person measuring and one person writing. If for some reason you are
not able to measure all of your oysters at that time then you can take
a large representative sample (>30%) and nd the averages.
Oyster shells have a distinctly round bulging
shape while barnacles are sharper and taller.
Use the tip of your nger to sense the shape
of the shell.
48
1. Always measure oysters on their
longest side
2a. Hold the caliper in one hand, use
the other hand to hold the oyster
2b. Place the jaws of the caliper above
but not touching the spat
3. Note your measurement
4. Measure all individual oysters, start
with the exterior, move from the umbo
to bill
MEASURING YOUR OYSTERS
1. Always measure oysters on
their longest side (from the top to
the bottom, also called the bill to
the umbo). When in doubt simply
measure the longest side of the
oyster. When measuring multiple
spat clustered together on one
shell it can be difcult to position
the caliper. Baby oysters are
very fragile. Do not damage the
oyster while measuring.
2. How to measure multiple spat
on shell (one person should
measure while one person writes
the measurements on the data
sheet):
a. Hold the caliper in one hand
and slide the jaws open grad-
ually with the thumb. Use the
other hand to hold the oyster.
b. Place the jaws of the cali-
per just above but not touching
the spat. Slide the caliper open
or closed until it is precisely
aligned to length of the oyster
(bill to umbo).
3. Note the measurement for
each oyster and record.
4. Measure all individual oysters
on the substrate shell. Start with
the exterior (rough) side. Move
from the umbo (pointed) end to
bill (rounded) end, measuring
all oysters systematically. Make
sure not to miss or repeat any.
After all exterior side oysters are
counted, move to the interior
(smooth) side and repeat.
56. Note and tally the number of
Umbo
Bill
49 Getting Started
5. Identify dead oysters (see p. 63)
6. Record the number of dead oysters
dead oysters. There will be few
if any dead oysters at the time of
stocking; however oyster
mortality will occur over the next
three to four months as spat
compete for space on the shell
and students must be familiar
with identifying dead oysters.
Dead oysters can be identied
with a light tap on the top shell.
If the shell is visibly open or there
is softness or movement in
the shell this means the oyster
is dead.
50
WHERE TO PUT YOUR CAGE
Oysters prefer brackish water
and wide tidal range to ensure
good ow of food and nutrients.
The ideal location to install
your oyster garden is a protected
embayment with good exposure
to tides and moderate to high
ow rate to deliver food and
nutrients to the ltering oysters.
Siting
The ideal siting to install your
cage is a dock, pier, or bulkhead
(seawall) surrounded by waters
more than 5 feet deep at low
tide. If possible, choose a spec-
ic location in the embayment
that is most protected and least
exposed to waves or boat wakes.
Access for Student Groups
The shoreline adjacent to your
oyster garden should be easily
accessible for your student
group and their needs. If possi-
ble choose an area of the
shoreline where students can
comfortably split into small
groups and monitor the oyster
garden. For some sites this
may include grassy areas, shade
trees, or benches. The teacher/
site coordinator should be able
to raise the cage from behind the
railing then bring it to rest safely
and securely on the shore side
of the railing. Ideally the oyster
garden should NOT need to be
disconnected from the railing or
other point of attachment.
Locate in brackish water
Best attachment point is set back or
invisible from railing
or
51 Getting Started
Attaching the Lines
The cage is secured with two
separate lines: a braided poly-
ester marine line and inch
steel cable. These two lines will
come pre-attached to the cage
before installation. At the time of
installation, the rst step is
to tie the long end of the marine
line to the pier or bulkhead on a
railing, cleat, or metal eyelet.
Make sure the cage is secured on
the shoreline while tying the
bowline knot. After the bowline
knot is tied correctly, lower
the cage into the water to check
the water level. To adjust the
water level, raise the cage then
retie the bowline knot. Once the
correct height has been
Back-up attachment: steel
cable with cable clamps
Primary attachment: marine
line with bowline (see p.69)
established, attach the steel
cable with plenty of slack to
serve as a back up to the marine
line. The steel cable should be
attached with at least two cable
clamps. If possible, choose
a point of attachment which is
well away from public access
(behind a railing) or even better,
out of public view. No matter
where the cage is attached, re-
trieving the cage should not
endanger the teacher/site
coordinator! For some sites, use
of a boat hook (hook on a tele-
scoping pole) will be helpful
to retrieve the line from behind
the railing.
Goal is to attach securely and make it inaccessible and
invisible from the public
1 2
52
HOW DEEP TO PUT YOUR CAGE
Very important! The ideal water
level for an oyster cage is two feet
below the surface at low tide. If
possible cage installation should
take place during maximum low
tide. If installation does not occur
at low tide, account for an addi-
tional 1 to 5 feet of depth
depending on specic tides. For
example if the cage is installed at
max high tide, then it should be
suspended 7 feet below the
surface. The minimum total depth
at any oyster gardening site
should not fall below 5 feet except
during extreme low tides.
Regardless of depth below the
surface, the cage should be
always be suspended at least two
feet from the bottom. Much of
New York Harbor bottom is com-
posed of thick mucky sediment.
This sediment can inhibit oyster
feeding and oxygenation,
slowing growth and eventually
suffocating oysters. The sedi-
ment is also home to the oyster
drill, one of the most destructive
oyster predators (see p.104).
In summary the oyster garden
should be suspended somewhere
in the middle of the water column;
closer to the surface (where there
is more oxygen) but never
exposed to the air especially in
the winter (extreme cold
temperatures can kill oysters in
a matter of an hour). It is recom-
mended that all oyster gardeners
measure the total depth of their
site before installation. When
in doubt, you can always return to
the site at an extreme low tide to
Keep cages submerged to reduce vandalism
and protect oysters from cold air
Keep cages at least 12 ft from
the sediment
2 ft
2 ft
53 Getting Started
make sure the cage is not
exposed to the air (or touching
the sediment).
54
SECURING YOUR CAGE
Please read and follow all of these
points extremely carefully.
The forces of waves and tides
causes the oyster garden to move
continuously. In higher energy
locations, lines and cables at-
tached to the oyster garden will
continuously scrape against
the edge of the dock or pier. This
slow steady friction will cut
through lines and cables in sur-
prisingly short order. To avoid
losing your oyster cage to the bot-
tom, check your lines regularly,
making sure both are in good
condition. Especially after stormy
weather its a good idea to go
check on your oyster cage.
In case of excessive abrasion, the
marine poly line can be placed
in a conduit of old garden hose or
replaced altogether. The vinyl
coated steel cable should not
wear down unless the coating is
torn, in which case the cable
will rust over time.
Cage Security
Unfortunately, oyster cages are
occasionally tampered with in
New York City. The most common
reason for tampering is usually
not malicious: maintenance staff
or others working for the property
owner, not aware of the program,
attempt to the remove or destroy
the cage. It is the responsibility
of all oyster gardening property
owners/site managers to inform
their staff and train them as
needed in oyster gardening proto-
col. Some sites may also choose
to display signage that explains
Some sites may also choose to display
signage that explains BOP
In case of excessive abrasion place
your marine poly line in a conduit of old
garden hose
OYSTER RESTORATION IN PROGRESS
OYSTERS ARE NOT FOR CONSUMPTION
NYC WATERS CLOSED TO SHELLFISHING
BY ORDER OF NYS DEC
55 Getting Started
BOP and restoration; however
this is not required and in some
case may draw undue attention
or nuisance to the garden.
In very rare instances oyster
cages have been tampered with
or destroyed intentionally by
people with malicious intent. The
best protection against creating
this sort of attractive nuisance
is simply to make the cages
invisible to the public, either by
installing them on a secured
waterfront property or by attach
the lines out of public view (be-
hind and set back from a railing).
While BOP has experimented
with tamper proof installation
mechanisms, these are prohi-
bitively expensive and not
justiable given the infrequency
of vandalism.
Lastly, and most importantly,
make sure the hatch is always se-
curely clipped shut whenever the
cage is lowered back in the water.
The bungee cord enclosure can
stretch out and eventually break.
If need be use two cable ties as
the enclosure for extra security.
Make sure hatch is shut, use cable ties for
extra security
Hook
Cable ties
56
Ok lets
see how
your oysters
are doing!
57
VARIABLES AND OYSTER GROWTH
One of the main research questions in oyster gardening is what
variables affect oyster growth rates and how do these variables
change across locations in the Harbor.
In this experiment, oyster growth is our dependent variable and
everything else is considered an independent variable. We can
compare oyster growth rates at one site across different times of the
year OR across multiple sites over the full year. For example,
if we are looking at oyster growth rates at one site over an entire year
and growth rates increase in the warmest months, then we can
hypothesize that temperature or seasonal water quality changes
are the main factors affecting oyster growth. If on the other hand,
we are comparing oyster growth rates across multiple sites and
some are demonstrating higher growth rates then others, then we
can hypothesize that site specic water quality parameters
(e.g., higher nitrogen content) are the primary variables of concern.
Regardless of how we design the experiment, to ensure the vali-
dity of our data and any conclusions we might make, it is extremely
important to monitor and record all variables consistently and
accurately.
The data sheet begins with students making (qualitative) observa-
tions on weather, water surface conditions, conditions of the oyster
cage, and conditions of the shoreline. Following that students
measure oyster growth, identify and count associated species, and
test water quality.
58
FIELD PROCEDURES
Arriving at the Site
As the class arrives at the site,
gather them closely around the
oyster garden installation site but
do not pull up the oyster garden.
Ask them to carefully and quietly
observe the entire research
area including the water, the
shoreline, and the upland areas.
Ask students to record their initial
observations (in journals) for
about ve minutes. These can
also be open ended and sub-
jective; how they are feeling, their
impressions of the place,what
they notice around them (on the
ground, water, air), their expec-
tations or fears for the day, what
they think they will learn, and any
other creative prompts.
After the initial observations are
completed, briey review the plan
for the day with them. Explain
that all small groups will be res-
ponsible for answering all
questions on the data sheet.
Explain that the nal data sub-
mission will be an average of all
the groups. Explain that redun-
dancy is a good thing in statistics
because it allows us to nd
errors and increase accuracy.
Observe the Independent
Variables
Break students into small groups
and ask them to answer section I
questions 1 to 6 on the eld data
sheet. What are the current
weather conditions? What are the
surface water conditions? Is the
site well maintained or not? What
is the condition of the water?
Does the water look dirty?
1. Observe and record for 5 mins
2. Observe weather conditions
3. Observe water surface conditions
4. Answer #1-6 on data sheet
59 Monitoring
Is there an oily sheen? How was
the weather three days before
leading up to the monitoring? Did
it rain? Could that be why there
is litter in the water? For question
3, the teacher should provide a
copy of a tide chart or be prepared
to look up tides in the eld using a
website such as: http://
tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/
stationhome.html?id=8518750
After all students have complet-
ed questions 1 to 6, the teacher
should gather all students in one
group around the site of the oyster
cage and prepare to raise the
cage. Raising the cage is one of
the most exciting and scien-
tically important moments of the
eld monitoring trip. Students
should carefully observe what if
anything falls or drips from the
cage as it is being raised. This may
include hungry blue crabs cling-
ing to the outside of the cage,
oyster toad sh and other nsh
stuck in the mesh openings, algae,
sponges, and possibly oily sedi-
ment if the cage has accidentally
touched the bottom.
During the process of raising the
cage the teacher should also
explain how to estimate water
level or depth of the cage. This can
be done by tying a colorful piece of
string or plastic onto the marine
line at the approximate level of
the surface when the cage is fully
extended. The cage should then
be re-lowered to see where the
piece of string falls relative to the
surface. The teacher should
ask students to make their own
estimates of the depth of the cage
based on this process.
5. Raise the cage from the water
7. Answer #7 on data sheet and
document cage conditions
6. Observe and record organisms in
the cage
8. Identify reef associates and
predators
60
Once the cage has been retrieved
from the water and placed
securely on the shoreline, care-
fully open the cage and ask all
students to observe the contents
but do not touch. There will most
likely be various small organisms
moving around; grass shrimp,
shore crabs, sand worms
and others. Ask students to give
a description of the condition
of the cage and answer the nal
question 7. Is the cage covered
over by algae and/or sediment?
(Fouling organisms can prevent
water owing through the cage
ultimately affecting the oys-
ters ability to feed.) Is the cage
damaged?
Identify Reef Associates and
Predators
Now split the students back into
their groups (see p. 43/44). The
Oyster Measurers will measure
oysters while the Species Iden-
tiers begin identifying and
recording reef associates and
predators. If there are not enough
students in the group for both
roles, Species ID should happen
rst. Otherwise the associated
organisms will dry out, escape, or
die before there is time to observe
them. Students should use the
Organism Identication Sheet to
help with species identication.
When an organism is unknown,
the teacher should be consulted.
If the teacher cannot identify
the organism take a picture of the
organism and send it directly to
[email protected].
Student scientists must record
and note the presence of oyster
predators and reef associates
Reef species id (see p.104)
9. Record and note the presence of
predators and associates
61 Monitoring
living amongst their subset of
oysters. Knowing the prevalence
and quantities of these species
over time can help us better
understand the variables affect-
ing oyster growth, both positive
(mutualistic or communistic
organisms) and negative (pre-
dator organisms). Students
should note the presence and
number of these marine
organisms. Record data on the
data sheet.
62
MEASURING 300 OYSTERS
Each oyster gardening cage has a
total of 300 to 1000 oysters. At
least 300 of the total number of
oysters in the cage should be
measured. To do this all student
groups will need to measure a
set of 60 oysters.
After the cage is opened and as-
sociated species have been
observed, the instructor will
divide the total number of oysters
into 6 subsets, one for each
group (50 to 200 oysters will given
to each group). Make sure the
students handle the oysters ex-
tremely carefully. Spat on shell
clusters are fragile when young.
Each group should receive at
least 2 calipers. Students should
only measure LIVE oysters. Each
group should measure a maxi-
mum of 50 LIVE oysters. The spat
on shell clusters for measuring
should be chosen at random from
the group subset. The remaining
spat on shell clusters should be
counted and the number of dead
oysters on each cluster should
be tallied.
Randomly choose 50 LIVE oysters
to measure. Make sure that
after each oyster is measured it
is separated from the subset pile
to ensure that each oyster is
measured only once. Live oysters
have both valves intact and are
rmly shut. Record oyster length
in mm on the data sheet prov-
ided. Oyster shell length is meas-
ured from the umbo to the bill.
And all measurements are to be
recorded in the metric system!
Calipers
Oyster shell length is measured from
the umbo to the bill. All measurements
are to be recorded in the metric system!
Bill
Umbo
63 Monitoring
All students must record at least
50 oyster measurements on their
data sheet (see p.48).
Mortality Monitoring
ALL dead oysters within each
subset are to be tallied and
the total number of dead oysters
should be recorded on each
groups data sheet.
Students should inspect their
entire subset of oysters to
determine the number of dead
and living oysters.
Count all dead oysters in the
sub-setDO NOT discard dead
oysters or detach from clumps.
KEEP ALL DEAD OYSTERS
in the sample and return to the
population.
Identifying Tips for Dead Oysters
Dead oysters will be gaping open
or will discharge bubbles at the
rim when lightly squeezed. Dead
oysters will also sound hollow
when lightly tapped. To double
check that an oyster is dead
gently try to pry them open with
your ngernail. A dead oyster
will generally open very easily.
Often a dead oyster is lled with
mud and therefore can be
mistaken for being alive. The
ngernail check is especially
useful to make sure that the
oyster is truly dead.
Dead oysters sound hollow when lightly
tapped
Dead oyster will discharge bubbles
when lightly squeezed
A dead oyster is gaping open
To check if oyster is dead, gently try to
pry it open

k
o
n
k

64
MONITOR LIVING OYSTERS
Each group gets a subset of the
garden; 50 to 200 oysters
Make sure the oysters are kept
out of direct sunlight; splash
water on the oysters to keep them
from drying out; baby oysters
are very fragile; be careful not to
damage their shells.
Carefully measure each individual
oyster on the cluster using the
caliper. Do not measure the larger
shell substrate, measure only
individual live oysters; be careful
not to damage the oysters
with the caliper jaws. The meas-
urer should call out each oyster
measurement.
The scribe should record each
measurement on the data sheet.
The measurer should measure
at least 50 oysters in the sample.
Once all of the oysters on a shell
cluster have been measured that
cluster should be placed in pile
of measured oysters; Be very
careful to keep the pile of meas-
ured and unmeasured oysters
separate so as not to measure any
oysters twice.
Alive
Each group gets 50200 oysters
Record length in millimeters
Measure
Compile and return to cage
65 Monitoring
Dont discard dead oysters
Dead oysters
Record number of dead oysters
Compile and return to cage
Count
MONITOR DEAD OYSTERS
When an oyster is dead its shell
begins to open. The shell can also
feel exible or soft to the touch.
If the oyster has been dead for
more than a few days, its shells
will be wide open.
Whenever a dead oyster is found
amongst the living, do not remove
it. Simply add one to the running
tally. Keep a tally of the total num-
ber of dead oysters. During each
monitoring trip you will need to
repeat the count of dead oysters.
66
MAINTAINING YOUR CAGE
Cages should be maintained in
person by an adult at least
once every four weeks from May 1
through October 31 and once
every eight weeks from Nov 1
through April 30. Maintenance
routine includes the following
items:
1. Haul the cage fully out of the
water and on to the shoreline for
inspection
2. Inspect the cage thoroughly for
any damage or weakness.
3. Inspect the lines and cable for
damage or abrasion. Replace or
reinforce lines as needed.
4. Clean and de-foul the cage
1. Haul cage out of water
Check line
and cable
Check
bowline
3. Inspect lines and cable
4. Clean off organisms
2. Inspect cage for damage or weakness
67 Monitoring
DE-FOULING YOUR CAGE
In our estuary, an abundance of
marine organisms will colonize
your cage, similar to what
happens on the bottom of a boat
or pilings on a pier. During the
summer months, when water
temperatures are warmest, foul-
ing will be at its peak. It is impor-
tant to clean the cage periodically
as fouling as can impede water
owing through the cage,
ultimately starving your oysters.
The most common fouling
organisms that will grow on your
oat are algae, barnacles, and
sea squirts/tunicates.
Scrubbing with a hard bristle
brush (provided in the BOP oyster
garden kit) will also remove algae
and sediment; barnacles may
need a harder tool. The hard spray
of a garden hose is sufcient to
ush off the scrubbed cage.
Be sure to thoroughly wash down
the area around your cage after
de-fouling. Most property owners
do not appreciate a pile of dead
sea squirts and slimy algae
littering their waterfront. If you
dont clean up, somebody else
will have to!
Desiccation or air drying can help
to reduce fouling; you may leave
your oyster cage out of the water
for a few hours (up to 6 in cool/
wet weather, and 24 in warm/
dry weather) on monitoring days.
This will dry out and kill many
organisms that have attached.
Scrub with a hard bristle brush to remove
algae and sediment
Flush off scrubbed cages with the hard spray
of a garden hose
Air drying can help to reduce fouling
Remove barnacles with a harder tool
68
WINTERIZING YOUR CAGE
Shallow waters of the Hudson-
Raritan Estuary generally freeze
in late DecemberFebruary.
Oysters are tolerant of the cold
water, but not cold air. Make sure
your oyster cage remains in the
water even at the lowest tides
during the winter. Keep the cage
closer to (but not on) the bottom,
so as to avoid damage from
any potential ice oats on the
surface.
It is very important to protect the
lines that are tied to the cage dur-
ing winter, as icing on the shore-
line can further accelerate wear
and tear of the lines. If need be, tie
extra lines to the cage during
winter to lower the chance of the
ice cutting the cage free. If you
need additional lines or cable
please contact BOP immediately.
Make sure your oyster cage remains in the
water even at the lowest tides during the
winter
Tie your line to a post or an eyehole
Secure a line to your cage
69 Monitoring
2. The rabbit comes out of
its hole
TYING PROPER KNOTS
Tying strong and resilient knots
(correctly) will ensure that your
oyster cage does not come untied.
A great knot for this purpose is
the bowline; this knot will never
slip, and holds especially well
under tension. The bowline should
be used for all oyster garden
attachments; line to the cage, and
cage to the dock.
Tie a bowline when:
A. You need to secure a line to
your cage.
B. You need to tie your line to a
post or through an eye-hole.
1. Make a rabbit hole
3. The rabbit runs around
the tree
4. The Rabbit Runs Back
Down Its Hole
70
RETURNING YOUR CAGE TO THE
WATER
Once the class has measured and
recorded all the data, place all
oysters back into the cage and be
sure to close the hatch and fasten
properly! (Use cable ties for
added security). If necessary, re-
install the cage by securely tying
the marine line to the railing with
a bowline knot and use the wire
clamp provided. Gently lower the
cage back into the water. Make
sure the cage, is continually free
of debris and fouling organisms.
These may need to be cleared off
so as not to impede water ow
over the cage and create excess
tension on the rope. Before re-
suspending your cage, make sure
that your rope is still in a good
condition. If necessary, replace
your rope or add a second line if
your cage is heavy.
Gently lower the cage back into the water
Make sure hatch is shut, use cable ties for
extra security
Hook
Cable Ties
71 Monitoring
TESTING WATER QUALITY
See water quality testing
procedures on page 76
Students will test physical
properties of water and water
chemistry using the Lamotte
Estuary and Marine Water Quality
Monitoring Kit.
Monitoring instructions for the
specied parameters are in
the appendix. You can also refer
to the kit manual when out in
the eld.
All students should be instructed
in water quality monitoring in
the classroom; however, when in
the eld we suggest having
only one student group (3 to 5
students) conduct the sampling
and tests. The water quality
test group can rotate during each
of the six trips or the group
can remain the same for all trips
(greater consistency/accuracy
of results).
Using a bucket suspended from a
rope, collect a sample of water
from an area close to where your
oyster cage is suspended. The
same water sample should be
used for all 8 tests as instructed
below.
Conduct the temperature and
dissolved oxygen tests rst, as
these parameters can change
quickly once the sample is ex-
tracted from the harbor.
Students will test physical properties of water
and water chemistry
72
OTHER NOTEWORTHY
OBSERVATIONS
Ask students to make any nal
observations about the garden or
the site as a whole which were not
recorded in the previous ques-
tions on the eld data sheet. Ask
them to take note of any social
or environmental conditions that
were not recorded previously.
For example, this might include:
ocks of birds nearby, school
of sh swimming around oyster
garden, oyster cage is damaged,
public visitors asking questions
about oyster gardening, construc-
tion on site, etc.
Photos
Take photos of the oyster garden:
oysters, cage, reef associates,
site conditions, water conditions,
weather etc.
Take observations about the site which were
not recorded in the previous questions
73 Monitoring
Verify and upload the data
UPLOADING DATA
The last component of the oyster
garden monitoring eld trip is
to verify and upload the data.
Data can be uploaded to the BOP
website either back at school
or in the eld using the mobile
version of the website. BOP is cur-
rently working on mobile app for
uploading oyster restoration data
in the eld.
The teacher has two options for
data upload:
1. Designate a Qualied Uploader
from each student group to
upload their own data sheet while
in the eld
or
2. Aggregate All Groups Sheets
into One Master and Upload It to
the Website Back in the
Classroom.
If each student group has reliable
data and a capable uploader, then
option A is better.
Regardless of which option the
teacher chooses, one student per
group is assigned to verifying
and submitting their data. The
verier can be the same as the
scribe. At the end of the monitor-
ing period, this student will
submit the data sheet to the
teacher and if possible upload the
data to the BOP website via:
http://billionoysterproject.org/
share-your-research/
CONGRATULATIONS!
You have nished the oyster garden monitoring and data collection
regime. You are welcome to conduct additional data collectionfor
example benthic studies and sediment analysisthen upload these
to the online database as supplementary material. You can also up-
load special research conducted by your students. Remember you
are required to upload the complete monitoring dataset at least four
times per year. Ideally your oyster garden should be monitoring once
per month from April to November.
The following appendix pages contain detailed information on water
quality testing, BOP lesson plans, and other supplementary material.
74
APPENDIX
76
WATER QUALITY TEST KIT
The following is a detailed expla-
nation of the LaMotte Estuary and
Marine Monitoring Kit; content
and how-to. You can also refer to
the manual provided in the kit for
additional information.
1. Kit Container: This big white jar
is not only to carry the kit, but
also needed for the Turbidity Test.
2. High Temp Thermometer: Use
this thermometer for high range
temperatures (>14C). If you have
your own digital thermometer
you may wish to use it here as the
test strip thermometers are less
accurate.
3. Low Temp Thermometer: Use
this thermometer for low range
temperatures (<14C).
4. Tablets: The Kit provides 6
types of test tablets to test the
different properties of the water.
10 tabs are provided for each test.
When you run out, order more from
lamotte.com.
5. Test Tubes: Your kit contains
different sized Test Tubes you will
need for your tests.
6. Color Charts: Use the two-
sided chart to INTERPRET the re-
sults of your water quality test.
Match the color of your test result
with the range shown on the
chart and record the number.
7. Pipet: You will need a pipet for
the disposing procedure of your
coliform test tube. You will also
need it for the salinity test.
1. Kit container
14161820 22242628303234363840
2. High temp thermometer
3. Low temp thermometer
5. Test tubes
4. Test tablets
6. Color charts
7. Pipet
77 Appendix
8. Secchi disk sticker
Household chlorine bleach
8. Secchi Disk Sticker: You will
use these stickers for the turbi-
dity test.
YOU BRING
The water quality test kit does not
include bulk supplies such as rub-
ber gloves, paper towels, bleach,
or a dump bottle. You will also
need to purchase a gallon jug of
distilled water for salinity tests.
Distilled Water: You will need
distilled or deionized water to ll
up your tube during the salinity
test. This can be purchased at a
supermarket.
Household Chlorine Bleach: You
will need the household chlorine
bleach to dispose your coliform
test tube.
Paper towels Rubber gloves
Distilled water Dump bottle
78
WATER TEMP TEST: PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
Parameter
Water temperature affects the
amount of dissolved oxygen the
water can hold, which directly
affects aquatic life dependent on
oxygen. Students will better
understand Fahrenheit temper-
atures, but in science it is im-
portant to become familiar with
Celsius. The Lamotte testing kit
only records temperature in
Celsius. Students can use the
formula below to convert C to F.

F = (C 9/5) + 32
C = (F - 32) x 5/9
Note: Alternatively, use the elec-
tronic thermometer provided in
the BOP oyster gardening kit for
both air and water temperature
testing.
79 Appendix
Use either the low range tem-
perature ( < 14C) or the high
range temperature ( > 14C)
thermometer, depending on
the season.
The thermometers have an ad-
hesive back. Adhere them to
a ruler or some other object to
make grasping easier.
Ask a student to place the ther-
mometer in the bucket of water.
After 1 minute the student
should remove the thermom-
eter from the water.
Then read the temperature
and record the result in the
space provided on their eld
data sheets.
1
4
1
6
1
8
2
0
2
2
2
4
2
6
2
8
3
0
3
2
3
4
3
6
3
8
4
0
14161820 22242628303234363840
<14 C
>14 C
1m
1 2
4 3
80
DISSOLVED OXYGEN (DO) TEST: CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
Parameter
The amount of dissolved oxygen
in the water is one of the most
important factors in telling how
healthy an ecosystem is. All
aquatic animals need oxygen to
survive. Many variables affect
DO, including temperature (cold
water can hold more oxygen
than warm water), time of day,
presence of plants, and wind
conditions. DO measurements
are given in mg/l and as percent
saturation. 100% saturation
means that the water cannot hold
any more oxygen at that tem-
perature. If more oxygen is added
(such as by a high wind or a
water-fall) saturation may tem-
porarily exceed 100%, but in this
case oxygen will diffuse from
the water into the air. Saturation
levels below 100% are not nec-
essarily the result of pollution. At
night, when plants arent pro-
ducing oxygen through photosyn-
thesis, saturation may fall
below 100% as living things use
up the available DO.
Note: ppm is the same as mg/l. A
healthy range for our estuary is
5.011.0 mg/l or ppm.
Submerge the small 1 inch
tube (0125) into your water
sample. Fill the tube with
water to the top.
Wait another 5 minutes for the
color to develop.
5m
1
4
81 Appendix
Drop two dissolved oxygen
TesTabs into the tube and
screw the cap on tight. Water
will overow as you do this.
Make sure there are NO AIR
BUBBLES in the sample.
Give the tube a good mix until
the tablets have disintegrated.
This should take about 4
minutes.
Compare the color of the water
sample to the DO color chart.
Record the result as ppm
dissolved oxygen.
4m
2 3
6 5
82
TURBIDITY TEST: PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
Parameter
Turbidity describes the cloudi-
ness or murkiness of the water.
Estuaries are naturally turbid.
In the Hudson Raritan Estuary
turbidity is made up of small bits
of plankton, pieces of detritus
or decomposing plant and animal
matter, salt and suspended
bits of sediment. While too much
sediment may not be desirable, a
turbid river does not equate
to a bad or dirty river that needs
to be cleaned. Turbidity can
reect high levels of plankton
productivity (both zooplankton
and phytoplankton), and large
amounts of detritus (or decaying
plant material) that is available
as a food source for marine
and aquatic species like oysters.
Murkiness can be benecial in
protecting the young-of-year sh
from predators.
Note: Allow jar to dry thoroughly
before replacing kit contents for
storage.
Use the test kit container to
perform the turbidity test.
Then ll the jar to the turb-
idity ll line located on the
outside of the jar.
1
4
83 Appendix
Remove the backing from the
Secchi disk icon sticker.
Adhere the Secchi disk icon
sticker to the inside bottom of
the kit container. Position the
sticker slightly off center.
Hold the turbidity chart on the
top edge of the jar. Looking
down into the jar, compare the
appearance of the Secchi
disk icon in the jar to the kits
secchi chart.
Record the result on the data
sheet as turbidity in JTU.
2 3
6 5
84
FECAL COLIFORM TEST: PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
Parameter
Fecal coliform bacteria are nat-
rally present in the human
digestive tract but are rare or
absent in unpolluted waters.
Coliform bacteria should not be
found in well water or other
sources of drinking water. Their
presence in water serves as
a reliable indication of sewage or
fecal contamination. Although
coliform bacteria themselves are
not pathogenic, they occur with
intestinal pathogens that are
dangerous to human health. This
presence or absence i.e. positive
or negative total coliform tests
detects all coliform bacteria
strains and may indicate fecal
contamination. The coliform
test in the kit will indicate if you
have above or below 20 coliform
colonies per 100 ml of water.
As this test is sensitive to move-
ment, it may be best to take a
sample of the water back to the
classroom and complete the test
there.
Note: This test requires 48 hrs for
results to be obtained!
Fill the larger test tube con-
taining the tablet with your
water sample until it its lled
to the 10 ml line.
DO NOT disturb, handle
or shake tube during the
incubation period.
DO NOT
DISTURB
48h
1
4
85 Appendix
Cap the tube and let the tube
stand upright, with the tablet
at on the bottom of the tube.
Incubate the tube in the up-
right position, out of direct
sunlight for 48 hours. The
rooms temperature should be
fairly constant (70-80F).
After incubation period com-
pare the appearance of
the tube to the picture on the
coliform color chart.
Record the result as
positive or negative.
7080F
2 3
6 5
86
Negative Reaction:
a. Liquid above gel is clear
b. Gel remains at the bottom of
the tube
c. Indicator remains red or turns
yellow with no gas bubbles
d. Indicates < 20 total coliform
colonies per 100 ml of water
Positive Reaction:
a. Many gas bubbles present
b. Gel rises to the surface
c. Liquid below gel is cloudy
d. Indicator turns yellow
e. Indicates > 20 total coliform
colonies per 100 ml of water
Note: This test must be disposed
of appropriately. Please refer to
test manual kit pg. 20 for details.
FECAL COLIFORM TEST 2: PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
87 Appendix
One tube at a time, remove the
cap and add approximately 1
ml (1/3 teaspoon or 20 drops) of
household chlorine bleach and
immediately recap.
Dispose of the closed tubes in
the trash. Do not open tubes.
NEVER reuse tubes after coli-
form bacteria testing.
Let the tube stand upright for
about 4 hours.
4h
1 2
3
88
PH TEST: CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
Parameter
pH measures how acidic or basic
(alkaline) a solution is. pH is
measured on a scale from 0 to 14.
The middle of the scale, 7.0, is
neutral, below 7.0 is acidic and
above 7.0 is basic. Seawater
tends to be more of a base than
neutral, so the higher your salinity
the higher your pH may be. There
are NO UNITS used with pH.
Most aquatic organisms are
adapted to a specic pH level and
may die if the pH of the water
changes even slightly. Most sh
prefer a pH range of 6.5 to 8.5 pH.
Fill the larger test tube to the
10 ml line with water from
your water sample.
Compare color of water sample
to the pH color chart.
1
4
89 Appendix
Cap and mix until tablet has
disintegrated. Bits of material
may remain in the sample.
Add 1 pH wide range test tab.
Record the pH result on the
data sheet.
2 3
5
90
Parameter
When we measure salinity, we
are measuring the amount of salt
present in the water. Much of
this salt is sodium chloride, just
like table salt. Variable salinity is
the most characteristic feature
of estuaries. In estuaries,
salinity can change daily with the
tides and tidal excursions.
Salinity also changes dramatic-
ally during the seasons. The head
of an estuary may experience
almost full-strength seawater in
the summer, while in the winter
oods of fresh water may reach
the mouth of an estuary.
The main source of salt in the
Hudson Raritan Estuary is sea-
water pushing in from the ocean.
Fresh water is brought down
from the mountains by the
Hudson River.
Seawater salinity range:
3335 ppt
Estuary salinity range:
528 ppt **
** Oysters preferable range!
Freshwater salinity range:
03 ppt
SALINITY TEST: CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
Use the supplied pipet to add
5 drops of your sample water
to the large round tube.
Add one Chloride TesTab
1
4
91 Appendix
Fill the tube to the 100 ml line
with distilled or deionized
water.
Then add 10 ml of the diluted
sample (Step 2) from the larger
tube into the 10 ml test tube.
Mix until tablet has dissolved. Place the tube over the
right-hand column of the black
circles on the salinity chart.
Compare the appearance of the
circles through the tube to
the circles, record the result.
2 3
6 5
92
NITRATES TEST: CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
Parameter
Nitrates (NO3-), measured in mg/
L, are a form of nitrogen. They
occur naturally as a part of plant
and animal growth and decay.
They are also abundant in human
sewage. Nitrates are essential
nutrients used by plants and ani-
mals for maintenance and
growth (building protein), but
normally occur in small levels of
<1 mg/L. Excess nitrates in
the form of sewage, fertilizer and
agricultural runoff can trigger
sharp increases in plant growth
causing problems for aquatic
animals, and if high enough, for
humans as well. Drinking water
with high level of nitrates can
affect the ability of our blood to
carry oxygen.
NOTE: The protective sleeve will
protect the reaction from UV
lightif testing indoors it is not
necessary to use the sleeve.
Fill the test tube with sample
water to the 5 ml line.
Wait another 5 minutes to
remove the sleeve
5m
1
4
93 Appendix
Add 1 Nitrate Wide Range CTA
TestTab, and immediately slide
the test tube into the Protective
Sleeve.
Cap the tube and mix for 2
minutes until tab dissolves.
Compare the color of sample to
nitrate color chart.
Record the result on the
datasheet as ppm nitrate.
2m
2 3
6 5
94
PHOSPHATE TEST: CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF WATER
Parameter
Phosphate (PO4-3) is the second
nutrient needed for plant and
animal growth and is also a fun-
damental element in metabolic
reactions. High levels of this
nutrient can lead to overgrowth
of plants, increased bacterial
activity, and decreased dis-
solved oxygen levels. Phosphate
comes from several sources
including human and animal
waste, industrial pollution, and
agricultural runoff.
In saltwater ecosystems ni-
trates/nitrogen is generally the
nutrient in shortest supply
(called the limiting nutrient)
although it can uctuate.
In freshwater ecosystems phos-
phorous is the nutrient in short-
est supply.
Fill the test tube to the 10 ml
line with water from your
sample.
Wait 5 minutes for color to
develop.
Note: If no color develops after
5 minutes, record the result as
0 ppm.
5m
1
4
95 Appendix
Add 1 Phosphorus TesTab. Cap and mix until tablet has
dissolved.
Compare the color of the
sample to the phosphate color
chart.
Record the result on the
datasheet as ppm.
2 3
6 5
96
RANKING TEST RESULTS
While standards of healthy water
vary by location and conditions,
ranking the results can often give
you a good introduction to water
quality monitoring and indicate
relative quality of the water.
97 Appendix
Test Factor Result Ranking Score
(from ranking)
Colform Bacteria Negative
Positive
3 (good)
1 (poor)
Dissolved Oxygen
Saturaion
91110% Saturation
7190% Saturation
5170% Saturation
< 50% Saturation
4 (excellent)
3 (good)
2 (fair)
1 (poor)
Biochemical
Oxygen Demand
0 ppm
4 ppm
8 ppm
4 (excellent)
3 (good)
2 (fair)
Nitrate 5 ppm
20 ppm
40 ppm
2 (fair)
1 (poor)
1 (poor)
pH 4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1 (poor)
2 (poor)
3 (good)
4 (excellent)
3 (good)
2 (poor)
1 (poor)
Phosphate 1 ppm
2 ppm
4 ppm
4 (excellent)
3 (good)
2 (fair)
Salinity 0 ppt
14 ppt
35 ppt
3 (good)
3 (good)
3 (good)
Temperature
Change
02C
35C
610C
10C
4 (excellent)
3 (good)
2 (fair)
1 (poor)
Turbidity 0
Between 0 & 40 JTU
Between 40 & 100
JTU
> 100 JTU
4 (excellent)
3 (good)
2 (fair)
1 (poor)
98
SAMPLE LESSON PLAN
99 Appendix
100
OYSTER LIFE CYCLE
Egg
Sperm
Fertilized
Egg
Spat
Spat Attached to Shell
Adult Male and Female Oysters in Reef
Cluster
Free-Swimming Larvae
101 Appendix
OYSTER ANATOMY
Mouth
Stomach
Heart
Muscle
Silia
Mantel
Gill
Liver
Lips
CONTAMINANT
DETRITUS
FILTERED WATER
Umbo
Bill
PLANKTON
102
ECOLOGICAL SERVICES
OF ONE BILLION OYSTERS
IN NY HARBOR
Habitat
Oysters create complex three-
dimensional structure that
provides exceptional habitat for
microinvertebrates, nsh,
crustaceans, and other marine
organisms that live and forage
in the reefs crevices. Restoring
one billion oysters to New York
Harbor bottom over the next
20 years would require the
creation of at least 500 acres of
reef at a stocking density of
about 2,000,000 per acre.
Improved Water Quality
Each adult oyster is capable of
ltering up to one gallon of water
an hour, equaling twenty-four
gallons a day depending on salin-
ity, health/size of the organism,
and water temperature. One bil-
lion oysters could therefore lter
twenty-four billion gallons of
Harbor water daily. The volume of
water in New York Harbor is
approximately 74,000,000,000
gallons at mean sea level.
Therefore, one billion adult oys-
ters could lter the entire
standing volume of the Harbor
every three days!
Wave Attenuation
Fully formed, mature oyster reefs
are large and durable three-
dimensional structures that can
absorb tidal energy, attenuate
waves, and provide benecial
accretion of sediment and ero-
sion control. If successful over
the long term, 500 acres of
restored oyster reef in NY Harbor
103 Appendix
could help reduce the bathtub
effect, create a calmer harbor,
and mediate the effects of
storm surge and erosion caused
by extreme weather and sea
level rise.
Submerged Aquatic Vegetation
With oysters continuously lter-
ing suspended sediment,
nutrients, and algae from the
Harbor, sunlight can penetrate
deeper into the water column,
allowing greater production
of submerged aquatic vegetative
(SAV) species, namely eelgrass.
Similar to oyster reefs, healthy
eelgrass meadows generate
numerous ecological benets of
their own, including increased
dissolved oxygen, retention of
sediment, wave attenuation, and
provision of vital habitat for
benthic dwelling crustaceans,
bivalves, and nsh.
104
SPECIES ID: ASSOCIATES
1. Mud Snails (Ilyanassa obsoleta): Small (< 1.18 in) gastro-
pod snail with a whorled, cone-shaped shell. Opening to the
shell is oval and large (1/2 the height of the shell). Dark black
or brown in color. Often, the shell is covered in mud, algae,
and encrusting bryozoans. Extremely abundant in Mid Atlantic
intertidal estuaries. Crawls along surface of the mud. Eats
algae, worms, and detritus (dead and decaying matter) in the
mud; eaten by birds.
2. Slipper Shells (Crepidula fornicata): (1.5 in) A small gastropod
with a one-valved shell, which is found attached to the
underside of hard substrates (including other shells and live
organisms).The underside of the shell has a platform extending
about way across the shell opening. Usually white-beige
in color. Often considered a nuisance species in oyster
gardens and beds because they compete with oysters for food
and space, and can inhibit oyster spat from setting to a bed.
Species seen in NY/NJ: Eastern slipper shell (Crepidula plana):
attened, pure white, and small (up to 1 inch. Common/
Atlantic slipper shell (Crepidula fornicata): has a more rounded/
arched shell, with brown markings and a slightly crooked axis
(tip is bent to one side); small size (1.5 inches).
3. Amphipod (Gammarus Spp.): (0.03913 in) Small crustaceans
(like crabs, shrimp, and lobsters) that are laterally attened.
Large eyes on either side of the head. Multiple pairs of legs on
the thorax.
4. Blue Mussel (Mytilus edulis): Small bivalve (< 4 in) with 2
shells (hinged together) that occurs attached to hard sub-
strates (rocks, pilings, ropes, etc) and usually found in clumps.
Shells are smooth on the outside, blue black in color and often
glossy/shiny. Mussels attach themselves using tough byssal
threads which glue the bivalve to the surface.
5. Mud Tube Worm (Spionidae family, especially Streblospio
benedicti): (< 0.24 in ) Polychaete (marine segmented worms)
with one pair of parapodia per segment (paddle like appendag-
es). Head is cone shaped, with 4 eyes, a pair of tentacles, and
2 pairs of gills. Reddish brown coloring with dark green around
gills. Small size (up to 6 mm). Lives in ne sandy, and silty
sediments that are easy to ingest. Make tubes out of sediment
and mucus and live inside the tubes, right below the surface.
6. Sea Grape Tunicate (Molgula Manhattensis): (0.41.2 in)
Small, round, jelly like animal that can occur in large numbers
on oyster gardens. Rounded, with 2 siphons on the top side.
Sea grapes (Molgula and Bostrichobranchus spp.) have
uneven siphons; most other species of sea squirt have
even siphons. Most species live attached to hard substrates,
such as ropes and oyster nets. Squeezing the sea grape can
cause the siphon to shoot water out at you (hence the name,
sea squirt!) Outer surfaces often covered in debris and
encrusting algae. Sea squirts are the most prolic oyster reef
associate in NY Harbor, sometimes covering an entire cage
with a thick layer of slimy mass. Sea Squirts have mysteriously
unique anatomy including an enlarged kidney with no out-
ow ducts and two levels of symbiotic bacteria that consume
its crystalline stones.
7. Golden Star Tunicate (Botryllus Schlosseri): (< 0.4 in) This
species can be distinguished from Botrylloides sp. by the
pattern of zooid growth. B. schlosseri zooids emanate from a
1. Mud Snails
2. Slipper Shells
3. Amphipod
4. Blue Mussel
5. Mud Tube Worm
6. Sea Grape Tunicate
105 Appendix
center in the manner of the arms of a star. Also, there usually
are fewer zooids per cluster (58 in B. schlosseri and 10
or more in Botrylloides). There are many colors in which this
species can be found, ranging from orange, blue and grey.
8. Sponges: (< 0.25 in) The simplest of all true animals,
sponges look like a plant but are really living animals. Sponges
can be free standing, encrusting, and boring (becoming
intertwined with their substrate). Species found in NY/NJ: Red
beard sponge (Microciona prolifera): a reddish orange brown
sponge that encrusts on a substrate, grow up to 8 inches; in
shallow subtidal estuaries. Boring sponges (Cliona spp.): very
small (less than 14 inch), yellowish in color; bore into mol-
lusk shells (especially oysters!) .Doesnt eat the oyster, but can
weaken the shell enough for another parasite or predator to
kill the oyster.
9. Sand Worm (Nereis Spp.; commonly called clam worms):
(< 2.36 in) Polychaete worm, with a set of setae (bristled, spiny
like projections) and parapodia (appendages) on each
segment. Head has a pair of sickle shaped jaws, and short
blunt palps near the eyes.
10. Barnacles (class: Thecostraca; common species:
Chthamalus stellatus): (< 0.25 in) Small organism, sometimes
found cemented along the ropes and mesh of oyster gardens
and on the oysters themselves. Usually white to beige in color,
and have a pyramid like shape, with plates forming a cone.
The outer surface of the barnacle is hard, due to calcium carb-
onate shell plates. Main type of barnacles found in NYC nets
is the acorn barnacles. Common species seen in NY/NJ:
Northern rock barnacle which is found in more saline waters,
and the Ivory barnacle which is found in lower salinity water.
11. Ribbed Mussel (Geukensia demissa; previously known as
Modiolus demissa): (3.95.11 in) Long, thin bivalve with
2-hinged shells that have ribs running lengthwise; brownish,
green brown coloring. Found in salt marshes and other
estuarine areas, usually attached to the base of marsh grass
and half buried in the sediment. Usually occur in clumps.
Attaches to plants and each other using tough byssal threads.
During low tides, shells are usually closed to prevent
dehydration, but the bivalves sometimes open to take in air.
12. Shore Shrimps (Palaemonetes Spp., especially P. Pugio)
Small: (1.52 in) often clear with dark streaks; with num-
erous legs and antennae. First and second legs have claws,
others with hairlike projections for swimming. The rostrum
(piece over the head) extends outward beyond the antennae.
Likes to hide out in eelgrass or other seagrass beds, or
congregate around pilings. Known as grass shrimp but are
not true Grass shrimp (Hippolyte spp.)
8. Sponges
9. Sand Worm
10. Barnacles
11. Ribbed Mussel
12. Shore Shrimps
7. Golden Star Tunicate
106
SPECIES ID: PREDATORS
1. Green Crab (Carcinus Maenas): (3.5 in) Shell has 5 teeth
(small pieces sticking out) behind each eye; shell is about 90
mm wide. Usually a darker green color on top, with a yellowish
underbelly; during molting the color can become orange and
blotched with white spots. Known to eat bivalves, especially
juvenile oysters (the crab is limited by the oysters size, it cant
eat larger oysters.
2. Flatworm (Stylochus ellipitcus): (< 1 in) These attened, wider
worms are usually found as parasites (an animal that lives off
of another, causing harm or death to the host) on larger
organisms, such as oysters. Thin, translucent body. Feed on
oysters and barnacles by slipping under the shell and eating
the animal from within. Species found in NY/NJ: Oyster
atworm :pale colored with eyespecks along front margin and
tiny tentacles on top of body.
3. Sea Robin (Prionotus carolinus): (< 3.2 ft) A small sh
(usually smaller than 1m long as adults) that lives its life near
the bottom of the intertidal area. It has a bony head, and
larger pectoral ns (located towards the head of the sh, under
the gills). The ns almost resemble stubby arms as they are
very eshy. Three spines come off of each n and are used
as feelers. Grey reddish brown coloring, with some paler spots
and stripes on the back and sides; white coloring on belly;
yellowish brown ns. Feeds on bivalves, worms, crustaceans,
and other smaller sh.
4. Oyster Toadsh (Opsanus tau): (11.814.9 in) Also known as
the ugly toad, oyster cracker, super bick and bar dog, is
a sh of the family Batrachoididae. The maximum length of the
toadsh is about 38 cm; the most common recorded length
of an oyster toadsh is about 30 cm. They are generally yellow-
ish with a pattern of brown oblique bars.
5. Blue Crab (Callinectes sapidus): (< 9 in) Has a wider shell than
mud crabs, and larger size (up to 9 inches for adults). Last pair
of legs is modied into swimmerettes. Spiny projections off the
sides of the carapace (body). Olive green bluish coloring, with
brighter blue color under claws and a whiter underbelly. Picture
shows a juvenile.
6. Mud Crab (Panopeus herbstii): Small crabs (< 1 in) with 10
legs; front legs have claws (one bigger than the other).Claws
can be colored differently; the rest of the body is a lighter
brown. Prey on juvenile oysters and crabs; can crush the shells
of up to inch bivalves!
7. Blacksh/Tautog (Tautoga): (< 3.2 ft) Has very prominent lips
with teeth jutting outward. Usually less than 2m long as an
adult. Often associated with reefs (mussel and oyster). Feeds
on bivalves, snails, and crustaceans.
8. Oyster Drills (Urosalpinx cinerea): (< 1 in) A small gastropod
(snail) with a single shell. One end is open and ared out.
Oyster drills prey on oysters by using their long, rough radula
(tongue like appendage) to bore a hole in the shell of the
oyster and suck the meat out. The oyster drill also secretes
sulfuric acid to aid in the decomposition of the shell!
9. Japanese Shore Crab (Hemigrapsus sanguineus): (< 1.5 in) An
invasive species, it rst appeared on the NJ coast in 1988 and
quickly spread north. Occurs in the intertidal zone, using rocks
1. Green Crab
2. Flatworm
3. Sea Robin
4. Oyster Toadsh
5. Blue Crab
5. Blue Crab
107 Appendix
as places to hide and forage for food; also seen on oyster reefs
and mussel beds. Small size (adults are usually up to
1.5 in) with a more square shaped carapace (the part of the
shell that covers the main body) than other crabs.
Usually dark brown green black in color; walking legs usually
banded in color. Eats blue mussels, soft shell clams, and
oysters mainly; can have a large effect on these populations.
Note the colored leg bands and square shaped carapace.
7. Blacksh/Tautog
8. Oyster Drills
9. Japanese Shore Crab
108
HUMAN HEALTH ADVISORY
The New York State Department of Environ-
mental Conservation (NYSDEC) designate their
states waters based on samples analyzed
for bacterial contaminants. Due to NYCs
outdated sewer system raw sewage and other
pollutants are still being discharged into
the harbor. For this reason the waters in NYC
are closed to commercial shellsh harvesting.
Filter feeding organisms, such as oysters,
concentrate harmful bacteria and pollutants
within their body tissue posing a threat to
people eating them.
SOURCES
Hudson River Snapshot Day Water Quality
Monitoring Guide http://www.ldeo.columbia.
edu/edu/k12/snapshotday/
Lamotte WQ Test Kit manual code 5911
NY/NJ BAYKEEPER Oyster Gardening Manual
CREDITS
Billion Oyster Project
New York Harbor Foundation
Urban Assembly New York Harbor School
Governors Island, NY
CONTACT US
Billion Oyster Project
10 South St. Slip 7,
NY, NY 10004
ofce: 212.458.0800 ext 6503
email:[email protected]
OYSTER RESTORATION IN PROGRESS
OYSTERS ARE NOT FOR CONSUMPTION
NYC WATERS CLOSED TO SHELLFISH-
ING BY ORDER OF NEW YORK STATE
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL
CONSERVATION
DO NOT EAT THESE
OYSTERS; they may
be harmful to your
health. Also, THEYRE
WORKING TO CLEAN
THE HARBOR. Let
them do their job!
Black Fish
< 6.5 ft
Japanese Shore Crab
< 1.5 in
Oyster Toadsh
11.814.9 in
Flat Worm
< 1 in
Sea Robin
< 3.2 ft
Blue Crab
< 9 in
PREDATORS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Oyster Drills
< 1 in
Green Crab
3.5 in
Mud Crab
< 1 in
Billion Oyster Project
New York Harbor Foundation
Urban Assembly New York Harbor School
Governors Island, NY

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