bob rheault, "the future of shellfish in rhode island," baird symposium

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Baird Symposium The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island Bob Rheault Executive Director, East Coast Shellfish Growers Association [email protected]

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Bob Rheault, Executive Director of the East Coast Shellfish Growers Association Topics: aquaculture, fisheries, fisheries enhancement, challenges and opportunities for shellfish farmers and shellfishermen in Rhode Island

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Page 1: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Baird SymposiumThe Future of Shellfish in

Rhode Island

Bob RheaultExecutive Director, East Coast Shellfish Growers Association

[email protected]

Page 2: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Celebrate the Bivalve

Page 3: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Primative500 million years old

Page 4: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Critical food for the survival of large brained primates

Page 5: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Shellfish Sex

John Norton

Page 6: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Shellfish feeding

Page 7: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

The Ultimate in Sustainable Seafood

Well managed.

Caught or farmed

responsibly.

No feeds or

antibiotics.

No fertilizers

Page 8: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Good food –Good for you too

High in protein Low in fat High in heart-healthy

omega-3 fatty acids Good source of vitamin B12 & minerals (Iron,

Zinc)

Page 9: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Bivalves with Benefits

Sustainable seafood Green jobs Nutritious & delicious Cultural icon Ecosystem services to boot!

– Remove nutrients - Stabilize sediments– Provide habitat - Reduce turbidity

Page 10: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Ecosystem Services• Nitrogen removal at harvest

• Each oyster and clam contains about 0.3-0.5g N

• RI Harvest 5 million oysters – removes ~1.5 tons N

• RI Harvest ~25 million clams – removes ~8 tons N

• Essential fish habitat• Vertical structure

– nooks and crannies

• Enhances survival

of juvenile fish

Page 11: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

To maximize ecosystem services

1) Maximize the biomass and harvest

– every clam or oyster that is removed will yield a small benefit

Page 12: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

To maximize ecosystem services

1) Maximize the biomass and harvest

– every clam or oyster that is removed will yield a small benefit

2) But we must ensure that harvest is sustainable - year after year

Page 13: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Keys to sustainable harvest:

Wild harvest can be too efficient, stocks can become depleted, harvests dwindle– Harvest controls (gear restrictions, bag

limits, minimum sizes, limit licenses, days, seasons)

– Stock enhancement (hatcheries, seeding, spread cultch, predator control)

Farmers replant seed following harvest

Page 14: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Comments from Roger BingVP of Protein Purchasing for Darden

Speaking at Managing our Nations Fisheries III

Washington DC, May 2013

Page 15: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Darden Today

Fiscal 2013 projected sales over $8 billion

Own and operate over 2,000 restaurants

Employ over 185,000 people who servemore than 400 million meals annually

The 28th largest private employer in America

On the Fortune Top 100 Companies to work for in the USA

A Fortune 350 Company

Page 16: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

From The Headlines

16

Page 17: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Fish Supply

Assumes: Aquaculture follows recent trend Capture fisheries remain stationary

– 211 million tonnes fish in 2030

Is the supply enough to feed future population?

17Source: FAO FISHSTAT

Page 18: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Fish Supply-Demand Gaps Per capita fish demand in 2030

estimated based on assumptions: – GDP per capita projection by

IMF– Prices unchanged

Total fish demand in 2030 estimated based on:– Estimated per capita demand in

2020.– UN population projection in

2030. Results:

– Supply < Demand 51 mt shortage

18

(mmt)

Source: FAO

Page 19: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Bing’s Conclusions In 16 years we can predict a global

shortfall of seafood supply on the order of 51 million metric tons.

We import over 90% of the seafood we consume in the US.

This is a food security and job security issue. Prices will go up. US consumers will stop eating healthy seafood and switch to cheaper proteins.

Page 20: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

“There is really no difference between fishing and

aquaculture – they are just two extremes of a spectrum of

seafood extraction techniques.” Roger Bing

Page 21: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Wild vs. Cultured

Much has been made of the conflict between harvesters and farmers

There is no bright line separating the two – rather a gradient of management approaches

Friends don’t let friendseat cultured shellfish

Page 22: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Laying cultch on seed beds in Connecticut

Page 23: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Harvesting the cultch with new spat attached

Page 24: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Starfish Mopping

Page 25: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Remote setting of oysterseconomical for restoration, fisheries

enhancement or aquaculture

Page 26: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium
Page 27: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Islip, NY town hatchery40 million hard clams a year

Page 28: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Wild vs. Cultured

There is no bright line separating the two – rather a gradient of management approaches

Most growers are former fishermen

The skill sets are similar

Both demand strong backs and a tolerance for tough working conditions

Page 29: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium
Page 30: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Fishermen and Farmers United by challenges and opportunities

The only real difference is who owns the shellfish – are they public or private?

Fisheries managers and farmers both invest in the resource. The main difference being who pays for the investment and who reaps the benefit.

Page 31: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Fishermen and FarmersUnited by Challenges

Water quality Predators Weather Disease / parasites Global warming Ocean acidification Labor intensive

Access to commercial dock space

FDA regulations

Cheap imports

Customers can’t open our products

Page 32: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Fishermen and FarmersUnited by Opportunities

Nutrition trends

Locavore movement

Omega-3 fatty acids

Sustainable seafood movement

Eco-tourism

Nutrient credit markets

Carbon credits Payments for

Ecosystem Services Global markets Demand projections

Page 33: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Challenges: low-cost imports

Page 34: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Opportunities: global markets China is now a net seafood importer

Emerging middle class demands protein

Demand doubling every 10 years

Global seafood prices projected to rise 70% in 20 years

Wealthy Chinese citizens don’t trust domestic products

Page 35: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Challenges: acidification

NOAA 2012

1/3 of CO2 dissolves in seawater and creates carbonic acid

Page 36: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Ocean CO2 Concentration and pH

Acidification Projections

Meehl et al., 2007

Page 37: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

AcidificationIn acidified waters larvae are challenged to form shell, clams won’t dig down in acidified muds “choosing” death by predation over dissolution.

Page 38: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Scaling up - 2012 Ocean Heatwave in the North Atlantic

Mills et al. 2013

Page 39: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

From: Mills et al. 2013

Gulf of Maine Trends:

Since 2004:~1°C every 4 years

Since 1982:~1°C every 40 years

Threats: Global Warming proliferation of parasites and diseases

Page 40: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium

Despite Challenges – Optimism Prevails

Fishermen and farmers are optimists by nature

Opportunities for growth

Opportunity for innovation

Opportunity to work on the water, make a living

off sustainable, delicious, nutritious shellfish

Page 41: Bob Rheault, "The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island," Baird Symposium