OPINION 4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 2016 Matt Winters Collection An oyster can label, circa, 1895, illustrates the practice of oyster tonging. Oystermen on Shoalwater and San Francisco bays used these hinged tools — something like giant salad tongs — to pick oysters off the bottom while the tide was in. SHELLFISH WARS Lobsters, Shoalies, Olympias, Atlantics and Paciics vie for supremacy I f you’ve ever idly wondered why lob- sters are such a big deal in New England and Maritime Canada but haven’t gained a claw-hold at our similar latitude in the Paciic, you’re not unique — the question has come up since at least the 1880s. Among many instances of European- Americans endeavoring to reconigure the West Coast’s animals, plants and landforms to our liking, efforts to establish lobsters here have to be counted as a failure ... so far. In 1888 two shipments totaling 565 adult lobsters and 104,000 fry were planted off the Paciic coast between Monterey Bay and the Strait of Juan de Fuca. “What the result of this will be can be con- jectured, but cannot be deinitely determined until after the lapse of suficient time to give the lobsters an opportu- nity to grow and multi- ply,” J.W. Collins told Congress in his land- mark “Report on the Fisheries of the Paciic Coast of the United States.” Already naturally providing such a deli- cious bounty of seafood options, the natural spir- Matt its of the north Paciic Winters must have concluded this attempt was human hubris of the worst sort, and slapped it down. But we didn’t give up. Failed lobster colonies ccording to the Canadian Encyclopedia, “from 1896 to 1966 there were at least 11 separate introductions of American lobsters into British Columbia waters, and even more along the U.S. West Coast. In Canada, intro- ductions probably totaled no more than 5,000 adults. Although American lobsters seem able to survive in the Paciic, there is no evidence that any of the introductions has resulted in a reproducing population.” Since we lack the Gulf Stream — the north-lowing tropical current that warms the ocean along the Atlantic seaboard — lobsters aren’t likely to be as successful here. Their eggs and fry also face predation by Dungeness crab and other competitors. Despite these challenges, it actually isn’t unheard of to ind lobsters in the Paciic North- west. In August 2014, a surprised isherman pulled up a heavily egg-laiden lobster just off the city of Vancouver. Speculation suggested it wasn’t a descendant of early introductees, but more likely the result of a good deed. “When you have a combination of live sea- food markets and members of the public who feel that it’s not fair to the animals, then you have people buying them to set them free,” University of British Columbia marine biolo- gist and professor of zoology Christopher Har- ley told the Vancouver Sun newspaper. This January, a different lobster with claws the size of a man’s size 11 shoes washed up on a Vancouver beach. “Those claws are pretty huge,” Harley told CBC News. “That suggests that if some- one bought it in a store and released it ... then it may have been cruising around for quite a while to grow that big.” A Will they ever prosper? ntroduced species — even valuable ones like lobsters — have all sorts of side effects, I Contributed Photo Damon Gudaitis Photo This giant lobster washed up in Vancouver, B.C. in January. For a sense of scale, note that the men’s shoe in the frame is size 11. including preying on native wildlife and carry- ing harmful parasites or pathogens. Although accidental introductions happen all the time, oficially sanctioned ones are rare today. (One local example of an invasive species gone wild is the sand grain-size New Zealand mud snail. First discovered in the Columbia River water- shed in 1997, it has in places now reached con- centrations of 200 per square inch, wrecking clam beds.) Regarding lobsters, UBC’s Harley notes, “You never know which lobster you add that becomes the important one” — the one that becomes the pilgrim of its species, stepping off Plymouth Rock and conquering everything in its path. It becomes increasingly clear that humans lack the organizational skills and willpower to avert massive changes in our climate and oceans in the decades and centuries ahead. There will be winners and (mostly) losers. Lobsters on the West Coast could be one of the winners. Washington state climatologist Nick Bond expects local seawater temperatures to climb to more lobster-friendly levels by around 2040. Eastern and Japanese oysters he Paciic Northwest’s enormous shellish industry, recently valued at $270 million annually, also is a story of introduced species, from Paciic oysters to Manila clams. The Gold Rush of 1849 spurred intense exploitation of the native oysters of Willapa Bay, then known as Shoalwater Bay. “Shoalwater Bay is celebrated on the Paciic Coast for its oysters, which occur abundantly there on natural beds. For a num- ber of year the oyster supply of San Francisco was obtained solely from this source,” accord- ing to the federal isheries report of 1888. When young Mark Twain was a San Fran- cisco newspaper reporter extolling the virtues of oysters, it was Washington Territory oysters he was slurping. The two principal oystermen in 19th cen- tury San Francisco, John Stillwell Morgan and Michael Molan Moraghan, each started out by bringing sailboats loaded with oysters T from Shoalwater, in cooperation with local partners. In 1869, soon after the opening of a rail- road connection with the East, large living Eastern oysters began arriving in the San Fran- cisco market. They became more popular than Shoalwater oysters, or Shoalies, for a couple decades. Like lobsters, they found West Coast waters too chilly to sustain long-term natural reproduction, either in California or in Wash- ington. However, adult Eastern oysters and young ones (called “seed”) imported from the east survived long enough to reach marketable size inside both Shoalwater and San Francisco bays, at least until siltation and other issues doomed them on this coast by around 1920. Shoalies make a comeback n the late 1880s, the novelty of being able to eat Easterns had fallen off and Shoalies made a second stand in the Bay Area. “Receipts from Atlantic coast beds have decreased and in 1888 only 48 carloads of ‘seed’ and 20 carloads of large oysters were imported from the East,” according to the fed- eral isheries report. “This may perhaps be accounted for by the fact that recently quite large quantities of native oysters have been brought from the bays of the state of Wash- ington (Where they obtain greater excellence than farther south) and planted in San Fran- cisco Bay. “... Many of the older citizens, having acquired a taste for the native oysters before any others were obtainable on the West Coast, prefer them to those brought from the Atlantic. This preference has created considerable trade in the native variety.” Price might also have played a role. In 1888, Atlantic oysters sold for $3.98 a bushel in San Francisco, compared to Shoalies at $3.37. In the 1880s, some Shoalies were said to grow to half the size of an Atlantic oyster. This would be gargantuan by modern standards. One 20th century Washington oysterman esti- mated it would take 2,500 native oysters to produce a gallon of meat — they are basically the escargot of the oyster world. I The early Oregon and Washington oys- ter firm of F.C. Barnes centered its oper- ations in South Bend, Wash. Like many oystermen and shellfish consumers at the time, Barnes made a distinction be- tween Shoalwater (Willapa) Bay oysters and those from the same species raised in south Puget Sound known as Olym- pias. Shoalwaters were larger and re- garded as better tasting. This receipt is for dredging work undertaken on behalf of the P.J. McGowan & Sons salmon com- pany, with canneries on Willapa Bay and the Columbia estuary. Depletion of native oyster beds in Wash- ington and a few smaller Oregon bays, along with the eventual failure of efforts to create a self-sustaining population of transplanted Eastern oysters, led to introduction of Japanese oysters in the Paciic Northwest. Renamed Paciic oysters in a marketing move, large Jap- anese oysters form the basis of the West Coast oyster business to this day. Though the mod- ern preference is for relatively small oysters, Paciics became popular with growers in part because they can grow so large — up to 40 shucked oysters to the gallon. There are some who argue to this day that establishing Paciic oysters in the U.S. was an environmental mistake — though few oys- ter lovers will agree. There are scattered, but serious, efforts to reestablish native Northwest oysters. In light of contemporary battles over how to control non-native eelgrass and an explod- ing population of native burrowing shrimp in Willapa, it’s also interesting to note deteriorat- ing conditions for oysters has been an issue for at least 13 decades or so. The 1888 isheries report notes, “The trans- planting of oysters from the natural to the cul- tivated beds has become necessary because the bottom of the bay near the natural beds is rapidly illing up with vegetable growths, and many areas which were once proitable oyster grounds are now worthless.” The human struggle to cope and adapt to changing habitats is an old story. This century will present many opportunities to hone those skills. — MSW Matt Winters is editor and publisher of the Chinook Observer and Coast River Business Journal. STEPHEN A. FORRESTER, Editor & Publisher • LAURA SELLERS, Managing Editor BETTY SMITH, Advertising Manager • CARL EARL, Systems Manager JOHN D. 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