Clam Recruitment – 2021 Results

Gouldsboro's shellfish committee places recruitment boxes along the shore to gather data about recruitment density. Identifying the bays and coves where recruitment is strongest is important when deciding where to focus restoration efforts. On December 17th we opened up the recruitment boxes that had been sitting out on mudflats during summer and fall. Opening up the boxes is kind of exciting. What will we find?

Steamers in the Rain

July 19, 2021, was a foggy, drizzly day, but that didn't stop more than 70 Gouldsboro residents from coming to the town park in Prospect Harbor to sample clams harvested by Gouldsboro shellfish committee member Mike Cronin. The year-round and seasonal residents attending the event learned about the new Shellfish Resilience Lab that is under construction in Bunkers Harbor.

Shellfish Lab – Getting Started

Work on the shellfish lab when it first started in Jamuary, 2021. This is a picture of the lab entrance as it was then. On January 27, 2021 three of us got together inside the lab-to-be to make a list of materials to begin turning what was a clam buying station into a shellfish lab. I took pictures so you could come on inside and join us in envisioning what the lab would be.

Gouldsboro’s Shellfish Lab – What It’s About

Gouldsboro is now (November 2020) beginning planning for its Shellfish Resilience Laboratory and hopes to have it operational by this spring. Located in Bunkers Harbor, the Resilience Lab is not only a key element in Gouldsboro's program to restore clam flats to productivity and sustainability, but will also collect data and develop know-how that other Maine communities can use to manage municipal shellfish operations as Maine's climate changes.