Oyster Hatchery Opening, Built With $3M From BP Settlement

GRAND ISLE, LA (AP) — A new oyster hatchery built with $3 million in BP oil spill settlement money to withstand hurricane-force winds is opening Wednesday in Grand Isle.

         The 7,000-square-foot concrete building, designed to withstand 140-mph winds, is raised 20 feet above sea level and will more than double production of the larvae used to seed oyster grounds, according to the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

         The building's recirculating water system allows year-round production, boosting the number of larvae from about 400 million a year to as many as 1 billion a year, department spokeswoman Ashley Roth said in an email Wednesday.

- Sponsors -

         State officials were in Grand Isle to formally open the facility. Department Secretary Robert Barham, fisheries head Randy Pausina, LSU President King Alexander and Louisiana Sea Grant executive director Robert Twilley were to speak at Wednesday's ribbon-cutting.

         Sea Grant has been involved in oyster research and improvements for more than 20 years, Twilley said.

         He says the hatchery building is owned by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, and Supan is in charge of the research and technology.

- Partner Content -

The University of New Orleans: An Investment With Lasting Returns

Higher education is changing, but one thing that remains constant is the University of New Orleans’ devotion to powering the engine propelling Louisiana’s workforce. For...

         Twilley called the partnership between Sea Grant and Wildlife and Fisheries "a great collaboration."

         The building, named after oysterman Michael Voisin, has allowed LSU AgCenter professor John Supan to bring his work indoors.

         He's been running an outdoor hatchery and research station at Grand Isle since 1993, moving equipment inland whenever a tropical storm threatened. After Hurricane Katrina, the hatchery was moved to the department's Fisheries Research Lab, Roth said.

- Sponsors -

         Money for the project came from the $1 billion in early restoration funds that BP PLC provided after the spill in 2010.

         Design work is going on for two fish hatcheries and research stations, also being built with money from BP. One for marine baitfish, such as Atlantic croaker and Gulf killifish, is being built in Plaquemines Parish. The other, just south of Lake Charles, will produce spotted sea trout, red drum and southern flounder.

         They'll be used to responsibly develop aquaculture-based techniques for marine fisheries management, Roth said.

 

 

 

Digital Sponsors / Become a Sponsor

Follow the issues, companies and people that matter most to business in New Orleans.

Email Newsletter

Sign up for our email newsletter