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Geoduck controversy continues unabated
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
Deep-water harvested by commercial
divers since before statehood, hunted and dug
recreationally at extreme low tide by local seafood
enthusiasts, geoduck (pronounced “gooey-duck”) are the
largest of the clam species, and native to inland waters
of the Pacific Northwest northward to Canada. A
distinctively unattractive clam, its siphon overflows
its shell; the many decades of its natural lifespan are
lived several feet down in tidal mud. About 10 years
ago, when commercial shellfish growers discovered
lucrative markets for geoduck in Asia, this homely clam,
and both the public and private tidelands where it is
found, became the equivalent of a present-day Gold Rush.
Commercial geoduck farms either
already operational or pending, with more sure to
follow, are changing Puget Sound shorelines. Controversy
over the aesthetics of the practice and environmental
impact of concentrated monoculture planting have
resulted in formal hearings, lawsuits, formation of
opposition groups, industry public-relations efforts,
and a Pierce County Council resolution requiring a study
of the practice.
Wild geoducks occupy “beds” that
contain multigenerations of the clam, and compatible
organisms: worms, mollusks, anemones and protozoa.
Monoculture farms consist of PVC tubes pushed into the
mud every square foot of the planting area, into which
are dropped at least three paper-clip sized geoducks. In
one of two Key Peninsula farming applications (SD 53-05)
scheduled for final hearings in late October, 30,000
square feet of private intertidal-zone tidelands would
be planted with an equal number of PVC tubes, resulting
in a minimum concentration of 90,000 geoducks on a
little over one-half acre of tidelands. After growing
five or six years, requiring nutrition and expelling
waste, they will be harvested at one time (over several
days or weeks of “sweeps” of the bed by water jet
hoses). What permanent damage is done to organisms when
harvesters implode the beach is unknown; what
potentially harmful organisms (cysts, eggs and bacteria,
all alive but dormant), long buried deep in substrate
mud, are released into the water column are also
unknown.
At a standing room only community
meeting in Rosedale on Oct. 4, area waterfront owners
and other concerned citizens viewed slides and heard
testimony from waterfront owners in Totten Inlet in
Thurston and Mason counties. Ten years ago, that 33-mile
stretch of beach came under mussel raft and geoduck
cultivation, and had long been a resource for oyster
farming. In the ensuing decade, according to meeting
speakers (all waterfront owners), the water quality has
deteriorated, shellfish companies have erected beach
fences to keep residents off, and their once beautiful,
quiet beaches have been turned into industrial
wastelands where they may not play, wade, beachcomb,
fish or boat, for lack of “open” shoreline and clean
water. These owners said they came to Pierce County to
warn residents that here, too, “World War III can occur
without science to provide a carrying capacity (for
nutrient waste and flushing)…Once it’s screwed up, it
stays screwed up.”
Most of the land mass along this
waterway is, according to Henderson Bay Shoreline
Association’s Laura Hendricks, high bank and sparsely
populated, traveled over by unpaved country lanes and
without a commercial/retail area. She has taken over 25
people to Totten Inlet to date, and says when she first
saw it, “We didn’t see anything move anywhere. It was
the saddest thing I’ve seen in my entire life… It has
become nothing but an industrial district.” Hendricks
says she has state documents indicating wells and septic
systems along that body of water are not a pollution
source, as is claimed by Department of Natural
Resources’ Jeff Schreck, land manager for the
aquaculture leasing program. Even so, Schreck, who
admitted he has never visited the entire Totten Inlet
site and has not been there at all in over a year, said
in an interview, “Totten Inlet is in bad shape; it might
go eutrophic.” (Eutrophic waters support an abundance of
nutrients fostering dense plant/animal life that decays
in warm weather and choke off oxygen to the water, i.e.,
red tide.) “There is no science,” said Schreck. “We do
need science.”
DNR plans to lease two-acre sites
in-kind (no fee to the state for farming privileges;
Schreck says typical leases average $1,000/acre/yr.) to
Taylor Shellfish Farms at four different Puget Sound
locations in exchange for scientific monitoring and
sampling to be collected by Taylor and analyzed by DNR
scientists over a typical five- to six-year crop cycle.
(DNR aquatic lease revenues go into the Aquatic Lands
Enhancement Account to among other things, rehabilitate
eelgrass beds, the depletion of which diminish herring,
in turn diminishing salmon.) A request by the KP News
for contact information to DNR scientists has received
no reply to date. Questions from KP News at interviews
and and audience participants in meetings as to why
existing farms cannot be used to begin science baselines
now, in addition to studying an entire plant/harvest
cycle beginning to end, remain unanswered.
Schreck says DNR’s goal is to lease
25 acres of tidelands per year over 10 years. This does
not equate to 25 sites per year, nor does an acre equal
a traditional square or rectangle. In aquaculture, one
acre can be “linear” — perhaps 900 feet from side to
side and 45 or 50 feet deep (43,560 sq. ft. in one
acre). In this first year of the leasing program, some
available sites are located on the Key Peninsula,
Harstine Island, Stretch Island, Hood Canal, and
Sammamish. Schreck says DNR has “a system of best
management practices in place.” (In a previous
installment of this series, it was disclosed that many
current practices were authored by the shellfish
industry itself, or through Pacific Shellfish Institute,
a company owned by Taylor Shellfish Farms, a “for
profit” business.) According to Schreck, “We’re taking a
real close look at who we’re doing business with. There
are slobs in the industry and we are just not going to
do business with them.” A KP News requested copy of the
“standards of best practice” is still outstanding.
At a meeting of Gov. Christine
Gregoire’s Puget Sound Partnership last summer,
Hendricks met Bill Taylor of Taylor Shellfish Farms. She
asked him how many of the state’s tidelands he planned
to lease. According to Hendricks, he said, “I plan to
lease all of them. We have the law on our side and we
are entitled to come in.” House Bill 2819 provides a
clear path through a maze of laws enacted at statehood,
repealed, granted “savings” clauses, and repealed again.
Ultimately, HB-2819 concludes that “any person who is in
possession of property that was conveyed under the Bush
or Callow Act (enacted at statehood for growing of
oyster beds only) is granted the right to use that
property for cultivation of clams or other shellfish.”
Testifying in favor of the bill were administrative
officers of Taylor Shellfish Farms, Pacific Coast
Shellfish Growers Association, Seattle Shellfish, and
Department of Natural Resources. (The bill also requires
a survey and marker buoys for all beds leased from DNR.)
Concurrently, the Corps of
Engineers, through the Departments of the Army and
Defense, printed in the Federal Register on Sept. 26 its
notice of intent to issue a new nationwide permit (NWP)
for commercial shellfish aquaculture activities. In
part, the notice reads: “Examples of commercial
shellfish species for which this NWP could be used…
include oysters, clams, geoducks, mussels, and
scallops…We feel the potential for adverse environmental
impacts from existing operations is minimal… The project
area may include areas in which there has been no
previous aquaculture activity…”
The NWP also provides for new
commercial shellfish aquaculture activities or
modification of existing commercial facilities by
“individual permits or regional general permits.” The
Corps is “requesting comments on the potential
beneficial and adverse effects that commercial shellfish
aquaculture activities have on the aquatic environment…
including appropriateness of attempting… these
operations in terms of acres, ecosystem health,
shellfish productivity,” and allows only 60 days
(deadline is Nov. 27) for citizen input. With apparent
consensus among federal, state and local jurisdictions
that the shellfish industry lacks adequate science to
guarantee no repeat of Totten Inlet, a statement in the
“Tidings” newsletter from Citizens for a Healthy Bay is
timely: “Solving problems is one thing; preventing them
is a lot easier and certainly cheaper, as we found out
in Commencement Bay some $400 million into a Superfund
cleanup.”
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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