ANNAPOLIS – The Oyster Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) Executive
Committee announced their decision to modify the schedule for determining
whether there is sufficient scientific information to release a draft EIS for
public review. The EIS Executive Committee has now agreed to a June 2006
checkpoint to evaluate the status of the report.
The EIS Executive Committee, comprised of Maryland Department of Natural
Resources Secretary (DNR) C. Ronald Franks, Virginia Secretary of Natural
Resources W. Tayloe Murphy, Jr., and Norfolk District Army Corps of Engineers (ACOE)
Colonel Yvonne Prettyman-Beck, agreed that given the vast scientific research
involved, more time is needed before a draft EIS can be released.
“The magnitude of this project, the volume of research data to be analyzed, and
the number of partners involved, dictates that we modify the schedule so that
sound science can determine the outcome of this study,” said Secretary Franks.
“We will maintain our goal to identify a strategy to restore oysters to the
Chesapeake Bay in an expeditious manner; however, we will not be compromised by
a rushed schedule.”
The EIS schedule modification was decided upon at a meeting in late November in
Richmond by the lead agencies of Maryland, Virginia and the ACOE in
collaboration with the cooperating Federal agencies—the Environmental Protection
Agency, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The modification timeline will allow for the
completion of the remaining elements of the EIS, which include the predictive
models for larvae transport, demographic (distribution) restoration of oysters
over time and an ecological risk assessment.
The agencies involved agreed to establish the June 2006 checkpoint when they
will assess the information gathered and analyses completed as they determine
whether a draft EIS should be released at that time. If it is determined that
critical research gaps remain, the modified target date will make it possible to
more efficiently direct available funding towards addressing the critical
outstanding issues.
Secretary Murphy stressed, “Virginia has always taken the position, in every
element of oyster work and throughout this current process, that sound science
is the backbone of the program. Our research work is vital to give us the best
possible means of evaluation.”
The lead agencies will continue to use public outreach meetings and reports to
inform the public on work done to support the EIS as results become available.
Reports on three major topics—cultural analysis, economic analysis and results
from a model that projects the ecosystem benefits (i.e., water quality
improvements) of oyster restoration—have already been presented. The next
meeting on model larval transport will be held in January.
At the November meeting, the EIS Executive Committee and the cooperating Federal
agencies also agreed upon a decision criteria matrix that establishes the key
decision factors policy makers will use to identify a preferred oyster
restoration alternative or alternatives.
“I am pleased with the collaborative approach that has existed during the entire
time that we have sought balance and synergy among human development and natural
systems,” said Colonel Prettyman-Beck, Commander of the Norfolk District, ACOE.
The State of Maryland and the Commonwealth of Virginia, in cooperation with the
ACOE, have undertaken the preparation of an EIS based upon Federal regulations.
The purpose of the EIS is to identify a strategy to significantly increase the
population of oysters throughout the Chesapeake Bay in an effort to restore
their ecological and economic values, as well as preserve their importance to
the Bay’s cultural heritage.
The EIS will evaluate a range of alternatives including the use of native and/or
nonnative oysters. Native oyster restoration alternatives focus on increasing
the scale of restoration, expanding the use of disease-resistant strains,
implementing a temporary harvest moratorium and expanding aquaculture.
The nonnative oyster alternatives focus on using the Oregon strain of
Crassostrea ariakensis and include a large-scale introduction program of
reproducing (diploid) oysters and an expanded aquaculture program using
non-breeding (triploid) oysters, including a contained on-the-bottom test
currently underway.
The Oregon C. ariakensis was imported to the northwestern United States
from China over 30 years ago. Non-breeding oysters of this strain have been used
in field experiments under strict biosecurity measures in the Chesapeake Bay and
in North Carolina since 1996 and 1999, respectively. The management and use of
these oysters has been in accordance with protocols established by the
International Council for the Exploration of the Seas for transferring marine
organisms to new areas.
NOAA’s Quarterly Review reports can be found online at
http://noaa.chesapeakebay.net/nonnativeoysterresearch.aspx.
For more information on oysters in Maryland, see
http://www.dnr.state.md.us/dnrnews/infocus/oysters.asp.
For more information on oyster harvesting in Virginia, see
http://mrc.virginia.gov/regulations/fr720.shtm.
December 14, 2005
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is the state agency responsible for providing natural and
living resource-related services to citizens and visitors. DNR manages more than 446,000 acres of public lands and
18,000 miles of waterways, along with Maryland's forests, fisheries and wildlife for maximum environmental, economic
and quality of life benefits. A national leader in land conservation, DNR-managed parks and natural, historic and
cultural resources attract 11 million visitors annually. DNR is the lead agency in Maryland's effort to restore the
Chesapeake Bay, the state's number one environmental priority. Learn more at www.dnr.maryland.gov