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2012-SHELLFISH COMMISSION
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2012-SHELLFISH COMMISSION
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12/1/2016 8:34:23 PM
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Mashpee_Meeting Documents
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SHELLFISH COMMISSION
Meeting Document Type
Minutes
Meeting Date
12/31/2012
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1 <br /> (t�F�'rowN o� <br /> Vi <br /> N' $ '' '� Town of Mashpee <br /> • , Shellfish Commission 16 Great Neck Road North <br /> s*L g Mashpee, MA 02649 <br /> �nuR c6_ MINUTES OF MEETING February 7, 2012 <br /> Attendance: <br /> Commissioners - Peter Thomas, William Holmes, Perry Ellis and Richard York <br /> Public— Marcus Hendricks and Norman Dias, Jr. <br /> Convene Meeting: 7:00 PM <br /> Approval of Minutes: Minutes from 2011 —Approved <br /> Shellfish Constable's Report: <br /> The summary for 2011 is that quahogs continued to be the most abundant <br /> shellfish with the wild population supplemented by seed from the propagation <br /> program. The Board of Selectmen closed Waquoit Bay for shellfishing except <br /> scalloping from November 15, 2011 through April 30, 2012 to protect large <br /> numbers of quahog seed and littlenecks from exposure to predators such as <br /> winter waterfowl. Approximately 100,000 oysters from the propagation program <br /> were harvested in 2011. This removed about 50 kilograms of nitrogen from the <br /> estuary based on laboratory analysis of the nitrogen content of our oysters. The <br /> numbers were lower than in the past because of a problem at the hatchery <br /> resulting in very low densities of seed in 2010. 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. For the first time since the 1980s when the wild oysters died off, significant <br /> numbers of oyster seed have set in Popponesset Bay. Spawns of oysters from <br /> the Town propagation program and shellfish aquaculture sites such as the <br /> Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe's oyster farm at Punkhorn Point were carried by the <br /> tides to set in other areas. The members of AmeriCorps Cape Cod helped with <br /> the propagation program. Barnstable County funded 20% of the oyster and <br /> quahog seed, and funds from Mashpee Shellfish permit fees covered the rest. <br /> The total was one thousand bags of remote set oyster seed, and three million <br /> quahog seed. The amount of quahog seed was increased in 2011 for a new <br /> project to control algae blooms and remove nitrogen from Great and Little Rivers. <br /> We issued 1011 shellfish permits (534 family, 438 senior, 28 non-resident and 11 <br /> commercial). Only a few bushels of scallops were harvested in Waquoit Bay. <br /> Water quality monitoring continued with collaboration of the Town, the Mashpee <br /> Wampanoag Tribe, and the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth SMAST. <br />
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