Case Study
Case Study.
âCan Suminoe Oysters Save Chesapeake Bay?â by Nieman & Liu Page ď
Annapolis, January 2008 âIf you donât do the right thing, we will take matters into our own hands.â
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Order Paper NowState Senator Ben Fisher hung up the phone slowly. ” at was one of his constituents, one of the many he had heard from that day, each one angrier than the last it seemed. His was the swing vote on the Assembly bill funding the full-scale introduction of sterile Suminoe oysters to the Maryland side of the Chesapeake Bay. ” e bill was an attempt to try to off -set the eff ects of declining populations of native oysters in the bay, the result of habitat degradation, over-harvesting, and disease. Introducing the Suminoe oysters would be an expensive and risky undertaking, but there were costsâboth environmental and economicâof doing nothing, too.
Environmentalists were divided, âcleanâ versus âpristine.â Some demanded widespread seeding of the imported oysters to deal with worsening water quality that was wiping out aquatic life in the bay. Others warned that this could be a bigger disaster than kudzu. Test introductions in Virginia had been limited and closely monitoredâand so far so good. But scientists warned that a few oysters would be fertile and might proliferate, forcing out the last of the Eastern oysters or interbreeding with the native species – bringing who knew what changes to the already damaged ecosystem?
Ben gazed out his offi ce window. âCLEAR THE BAY!â said one of the banners that blocked his view of the sailboats in the harbor. âDONâT TINKER WITH A NATIONAL TREASURE!â warned another.
Business interests held all sorts of positions. âWeâd rather see those tax dollars go into developing infrastructure for high-end development,â a major developer with plans for summer homes, condos and retail shops had emailed Ben. âDo you know what that land is worth under those broken-down, abandoned fi shing shacks?â He didnât need to add that he put a lot of money into political campaigns.
” e owner of a fi sh market had called earlier in the day, worried that the oysters, whether native or otherwise, might not be fi t for eating as a result of all the pollution they fi ltered from the water. She had few oysters to sell nowâwould the new ones appeal to customers?
” e Delmarva Peninsula poultry producers didnât want any more controls on the nutrient load entering the bay. ” ey felt there were too many controls as it was, and warned that more controls would hamper their operations. ” ey were all in favor of the oysters as a solution. So were the charter-boat owners who wanted clear water for the rockfi sh.
The commercial fishing industry wanted the oysters too, and now. Boats were idled and processing plants were handling trucked-in Louisiana oysters. The biggest plant in Benâs district said it would close this year if things didnât change. These new oysters grew three times as fast, they said. It wasnât too late to save an industry.
Can Suminoe Oysters Save Chesapeake Bay? by Valerie Nieman Department of English Department of Journalism and Mass Communication North Carolina A&T State University Zhi-Jun Liu Department of Geography University of North CarolinaâGreensboro
âCan Suminoe Oysters Save Chesapeake Bay?â by Nieman & Liu Page ď
Image Credit: Copyright Š Robert Kyllo. Copyright Š ď ďďď by the National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science. Originally published ďď /ď ď /ďď at http://www.sciencecases.org/chesapeake_bay/chesapeake_bay.asp Please see our usage guidelines, which outline our policy concerning permissible reproduction of this work.
On the other hand, the State of North Carolina was threatening a lawsuit, fearful that the nonnative oysters would spread down the coast and aff ect their beds. ” ey cited the destructive virus brought in by oyster introductions decades ago.
And many of Benâs constituents were in an uproar over the expense that Marylanders would bear for the oyster optionâor the alternative. Towns and cities didnât want to spend money to upgrade their sewer systems when so much pollution came from out-of-state.
Even within the Senatorâs own family there was division. His father, who had started tonging oysters when he was a boy, said it was time to let the old ways go, that fi shing was no way to make a living these days. Spend the money elsewhere. His daughter, a member of a cultural preservation group, pleaded: âWe need to preserve the watermen culture. We need the oysters.â
And now this dramatic phone callâdesperate people threatening to take the matter into their own hands and dump imported oystersânonsterile ones that could reproduce and spreadâinto the bay to restore the beds. ” e debate had dragged on too long, they said. A decision had to be made.
Senator Ben Fisher left his offi ce and walked down the echoing hall to the Assembly chamber, where he would have to cast his vote.
Questions ď. Who is being aff ected by this decision and how? ď . If the decision is made to introduce the Suminoe oysters, what might be the long-term eff ects on
the environment, the communities, the people? ď. Any choice implies other lost opportunities. In what alternative ways might this money be spent
to deal with the Chesapeake Bayâs problems and serve constituents? ď. What might this region look like in ď ď years if nothing is done? ď. What should Senator Ben Fisher do?