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Oysters • • • • • Eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica): European (flat) oyster (Ostrea edulis): Kumamoto oyster (Crassostrea sikamea): Olympia oyster (Ostrea lurida): Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas): Olympia oyster (Ostrea lurida • The Olympia oyster is found from Alaska to Baja California, although Washington is the only state that has produced Olympias on a commercial scale. Overfishing and pollution have reduced catch levels to less than one percent of former levels. A few growers in Washington state have had some success farming Olympias, but production remains limited. Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) • Comprises 98 percent of world farmed oyster production. Native to Japan, it is now farmed extensively in Washington state, British Columbia, Europe, and the Pacific Rim. Most growers use hatchery seeds and raise the oysters on the ocean bottom or on trays or ropes suspended in the water column. Purchase and Storing Tips • If stored at 36-40 degrees F in a moist environment, oysters can be kept up to two weeks after they are collected, however, shelf life is shorter after spawning in the summer. • As a rule, Olympia oysters command the highest price, followed by European oysters, Kumamotos, Pacific oysters, and Eastern oysters. • By law, a live-oyster shipment must include identification of the oysters' origin and collection date; it is illegal to discard this tag sooner than 90 days after delivery. PRODUCT FORMS: • • • • • • • • • LIVE. SHUCKED MEATS: Graded: Petite (250-400/gal.), Extra Small (145-250/gal.) Small (96-144/gal.) Medium (64-95/gal.) Large (64 and under) FROZEN: IQF meats and on the half shell SMOKED meats BREADED YIELD: • 5-14%, depending on species and time of year (meat yield is lower after spawning). SIZE RANGE: • • • • • • In shell: Pacific oysters—2 1/2 - 7 inches, Eastern oysters—3 - 5 inches Kumamotos—2 1/2 -3 inches Olympia oyster—1/2 - 1 inch European flat oyster—3 - 4 inches Meats: 2/10 of an ounce to 2 ounces. MARKET NAME(S): • In shell oysters marketed under various regional names (Blue Points, Hama Hamas, Wellfleets, Snow Creeks, Fanny Bays, Icy Bays, Hog Island, Pearl Bay etc.) or by species name (Olympias, Flats, Kumamotos etc.) WASHINGTON IN BRIEF Statistics • Top 5 Agricultural Commodities (2002) • CommodityValue of receipts (thousand $) Percent of U.S. value • • • • • • Apples Dairy products Cattle and calves Potatoes Wheat Oysters 977,508 671,040 614,385 478,166 475,718 30,500 63.3% 3.3% 1.6% 5.8% 8.6% 70.% Shellfish Nursery Rearing Systems 1: Oyster Seed on Cultch • Seed that has successfully settled on shell or tubes is moved from setting tanks to nursery areas. • Nurseries can be intertidal or subtidal. – Rearing oyster seed on an intertidal beach hardens the seed, reduces predation and fouling but steps must be taken to prevent seed drying or being damaged by intense sunlight when it is exposed to the air between high tides. Intertidal nurseries are usually between the 1.5 and 2.5 meter level. Growing algae in special indoor tanks Nursery Systems: Upwellers for Clam and Single Oyster Seed • Outdoor setting tanks at the hatchery Harvesting • Harvesting . TRIPLOID OYSTERS Triploid Oysters are a new type of oyster produced during hatchery spawning by increasing the number of chromosomes, the genetic material found in all living things. THE "ALL-SEASON OYSTER" Triploid Oysters have two important advantages over Diploids during their life cycle. In the Summer months when regular Diploid Oysters are spawny, Triploids remain firm, full and sweet. And they maintain this quality during the Fall, when spawned-out Diploid Oysters are watery and reduced in mass. THE WORLD'S LARGEST OYSTER HATCHERY To meet our growing need for consistent, high quality oyster larvae and seed, we developed our own Quilcene, WA hatchery beginning in 1978. Here, advanced technology, experienced technicians, and a superb natural environment have combined to make it the world's largest, with a capacity in excess of 30 billion oyster larvae per year. This same quality is now available to provide other growers worldwide with a variety of oyster and clam species, plus algae feeds, and various support services. Problems