My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
2011-SHELLFISH COMMISSION
TownOfMashpee
>
Town Clerk
>
Minutes
>
SHELLFISH COMMISSION
>
2010-2019
>
2011
>
2011-SHELLFISH COMMISSION
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
12/1/2016 8:28:40 PM
Creation date
11/17/2016 3:27:45 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Mashpee_Meeting Documents
Board
SHELLFISH COMMISSION
Meeting Document Type
Minutes
Meeting Date
12/31/2011
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
10
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
t-N,'IOW. W Or <br /> p ........ �'y <br /> �v' Town of Mashpee <br /> • Shellfish Commission 16 Great Neck Road North <br /> 6 ., i:g• Mashpee, MA 02649 <br /> 9���lULC to-, MINUTES OF MEETING — January 11, 2011 <br /> Attendance: <br /> Commissioners: Stephen Marques, William Holmes, and Richard York <br /> Others: Richard and Diane Cook <br /> Convene Meeting: 7:00 PM <br /> Approval of Minutes: November 9, 2010—A motion to approve the minutes was <br /> made by Marques and seconded by York. Vote— unanimous for approval. <br /> Public Comment: (none) <br /> Shellfish Constable's Report: <br /> The exceptionally clear sunny weather in 2010 heated the water in the <br /> estuaries to record high temperatures. Water temperatures as high as 85°F <br /> were recorded in the bottom waters of Waquoit Bay during the first week of July. <br /> Temperatures up to 90°F were observed at low tides in shallower waters such as <br /> the Mashpee River. The high temperatures caused the death the majority of the <br /> soft-shell clams. Oysters, quahogs and other species of shellfish tolerate higher <br /> temperatures, and grew fast as they filtered food from algae blooms. Quahogs <br /> continue to be the most abundant shellfish with the wild population supplemented <br /> by seed from the propagation program. Large numbers of quahog larvae <br /> observed in Waquoit Bay in 2009 grew to increase the amount of seed in the bay <br /> in 2010. Oyster and bay scallop harvests were the result of seed from the <br /> propagation program because their spawns have not been successful for <br /> recruitment and the wild populations died out in the 1980s and 1990s <br /> respectively. Approximately 200,000 oysters were harvested in 2010. This <br /> removed about 100 kilograms of nitrogen from the estuary based on laboratory <br /> analysis of the nitrogen content of our oysters. The massive fish kill in the <br /> Mashpee River that occurred in the summer of 2005 because of oxygen <br /> depletion from a thick algae bloom growing on excess nutrients (nitrogen) has <br /> not been repeated since we have been growing large numbers of oysters in the <br /> river. About 50 bushels of bay scallops were harvested from Waquoit Bay in <br /> 2010. The members of AmeriCorps Cape Cod helped with the propagation <br /> program. Barnstable County funded 20% of the oyster and quahog seed, and <br /> funds from Mashpee Shellfish permit fees covered the rest. The total was one <br /> thousand bags of remote set oyster seed, one million quahog seed, and one <br /> hundred thousand bay scallop seed. We issued 975 shellfish permits. By type <br /> there were 502 family, 427 senior, 32 non-resident and 12 commercial permits. <br /> (In 2009, a total of 919 permits were issued.) Water quality monitoring continued <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.