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hatrack

(59,574 posts)
Tue Nov 12, 2019, 08:34 AM Nov 2019

Louisiana Oyster Fishery Collapsing; First Deepwater Horizon, Now Freshwater Floods

For decades, customers who visited the P & J Oyster Company’s headquarters in the French Quarter on the day before Thanksgiving were greeted by a sampling of what the holiday would bring: baked oysters, oyster dressing, oyster soup, oysters Rockefeller.

“There are so many things you can make with our oysters,” said Al Sunseri, who runs the company, an oyster distributor and processor, with his brother Sal, and son, Blake. “I don’t see that tradition coming back.”

The Thanksgiving buffet stopped appearing in 2010, when the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disrupted oyster harvests all along the Gulf Coast, and particularly in Louisiana, normally the nation’s largest oyster-producing state. The business, and the distinctive cooking and dining traditions it supports, had already been battered by Hurricane Katrina five years earlier. And now it is enduring an even bigger setback: This spring and summer, the Mississippi River, swollen by Midwestern rain and snow, inundated coastal marshes, lakes and bays with freshwater, killing oysters by the millions. That has led to shortages and soaring prices.

The future isn’t looking much better, given the continuing impact of oil extraction, flood-protection measures and the climate change that many scientists believe will increase precipitation in the long term. For the people who harvest, sell, shuck and serve the bivalves, that’s a worrisome prospect: Oysters, traditionally cheap and plentiful, are more central to the restaurant and cooking culture of the Gulf Coast than to that of any other region.

EDIT

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/12/dining/gulf-oysters.html

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Louisiana Oyster Fishery Collapsing; First Deepwater Horizon, Now Freshwater Floods (Original Post) hatrack Nov 2019 OP
k riversedge Nov 2019 #1
Oysters clean the water. Like a furnace filter cleans air OhNo-Really Nov 2019 #2
Kick and recommend for visibility. bronxiteforever Nov 2019 #3

OhNo-Really

(3,985 posts)
2. Oysters clean the water. Like a furnace filter cleans air
Tue Nov 12, 2019, 10:16 AM
Nov 2019

Gone are the days for LA

The water is too toxic

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