Fishermen pull up dead and dying oysters

Ryan Guerra drags an oyster dredge along a lease 40 miles east of the Bonnet Carre Spillway in St. Bernard Parish.

He finds the vast majority of his oysters are dead.

The few thatโ€™s alive right now, theyโ€™re dying in the shell,” said the 43-year-old Guerra, who has been fishing these waters for a quarter of a century.

โ€œUsually, you can take an oyster and do like that,” said Guerra, shaking an oyster. “Itโ€™s going to stay in the shell, but with it being rotten like that, itโ€™s coming out easy.โ€

Guerra shows what appears to be Mississippi River mud within the shell of an oyster.

โ€œI guess they canโ€™t filter the mud thatโ€™s coming, the sand and the fresh water and thatโ€™s what kills them.โ€

The spillway, which has operated two separate times this year for a combined total of roughly three months, is not the only source of fresh water on the east bank of the Mississippi River.

Full article by John Snell

 

 

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