Growing Quahaugs for Healthy Ponds and Bodies
For the next few months, the quahaugs will float on a sandy bed above the pond bottom.
Ray Ewing
Assistant shellfish constable Fred Benson helms the boat.
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Hard to believe 75,000 quahaug babies fit in a baggie.
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“If there wasn’t any stock enhancement there would be no shellfish on the Island,” Danielle Ewart said.
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“If there wasn’t any stock enhancement there would be no shellfish on the Island,” Danielle Ewart said.
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Easy to see why they are called seed.
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Sprinkling seed quahaugs, a few thousand at a time, into custom-built floating crates submerged in the pond.
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Sprinkling seed quahaugs, a few thousand at a time, into custom-built floating crates submerged in the pond.
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From little seed, big quahaugs grow.
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Quahaug seed began their journey with the Martha's Vineyard Shellfish Group.
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Scallop cages also float on the Tisbury side of the Lagoon, as part of eelgrass restoration project.
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Scallop cages also float on the Tisbury side of the Lagoon, as part of eelgrass restoration project.
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Fruit of the sea.
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Bushels of clams raked from the bottom of the pond.
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The seed quahaugs are poppy seed-sized versions of what they look like when full grown. The shells are purple striped, and the quahaugs have a tiny foot for movement. Once they have grown to about the size of a thumbnail they will be moved to the west arm of the pond to continue to grow.
