UK: Native oysters return to Belfast after a century's absence

Published 2023년 12월 17일

Tridge summary

The Ulster Wildlife group is working on a project to restore native oyster reefs in Belfast Lough that have been decimated by overfishing, disease, and pollution. Oysters are being brought in from Scotland and lowered into the Lough in cages to create a local "equivalent of a coral reef", which will benefit marine biodiversity and water quality. The project aims to replicate the successful restoration of oyster populations in New York and could potentially result in the return of marine life such as dolphins to Belfast Harbor.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Long gone from Belfast's famed harbor where the Titanic was built, oysters are making a comeback thanks to a nursery installation project aimed at boosting marine life and water quality.Until the early 1900s, the narrow Belfast Lough channel was home to large oyster reefs but overfishing, disease and pollution gradually decimated the population, according to the Ulster Wildlife group."We're bringing back a lost habitat," the group's marine conservation manager David Smyth told AFP on a harbor quay in the shadow of a noisy downtown highway and towering commercial buildings.Extensive native oyster beds were abundant in European seas, and humans have been harvesting them since the Stone Age.But the group estimates that oyster populations have declined by 95 percent since the 19th century, with native oyster reefs now one of the most threatened habitats in Europe.Last month a nursery comprising some 700 of the mollusks—brought from Scotland by van, and measured and screened for ...
Source: Phys

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