Most oysters do not have a fixed sex that stays with them throughout the course of their life, they can change from male to female over the course of a lifetime and many contain both egg and sperm. After reaching maturity, which takes about a year, they release sperm into the water, but it takes the older more mature oysters to release the eggs. The sperm and eggs meet in the water to fertilize and develop into larvae, a process that takes about six hours.
“Oysters spawn typically in May and June when the water starts warming up to about 75°,” explained Justin. “Normally you need some fresh water for them to start spawning, so you have salinity change and temperature change. We use what we call cultch, which is basically just rock or shell, anything an oyster will stick to. You put the cultch in the water, the oysters will spawn and eventually the larvae will set. When they first land that’s the only time an oyster has legs, they can actually crawl around and find something to set on, and once they set they are known as spat. When an oyster dies it automatically opens and many times the larvae set on the open shell. You might have a hundred baby oysters that have attached themselves to one oyster shell, but then the crabs come through and drum and fish and they pick off the ones they want, you might have two that survive out of the one or two hundred that set there. But you wouldn’t want all of them to survive because it would be way too overcrowded. If they don’t find something to set on, they won’t survive but once they set, they’re there, and they start growing. You just have to have some material there and the right conditions. As long as the conditions are right in the area and you have enough seed oysters that are spawning, you can bring an area back pretty quickly and that’s what they did in the Chesapeake Bay area. Maryland and Virginia are predominately private leases, they’re not public waters. In public waters you have the tragedy of the commons, which is when anything that is public and you release people out there freely they have no duty to protect it, they want to get as much as they can as quickly as they can before anyone else does. So, public reefs, just like anything else public, are just not that efficient. If you invest your own money and grow your own oysters, now you’re going to take care of them and preserve them. Virginia and Maryland are a testament to how well that works. Because of their management, Texas went from being number one in the nation to being third or fourth.
“Oysters grow their own shell, which is basically calcium carbonate,” noted Justin. The oysters eat phytoplankton. Phytoplankton absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and uses it for photosynthesis; which is the main food source for oysters. When oysters filter water through their gills the phytoplankton are trapped in the gills and moved to the oyster’s mouth for digestion. “Oysters use the carbon dioxide and calcium carbonate to build their shells. Because of the oysters eating the phytoplankton which has pulled the CO² out of the atmosphere, there’s actually carbon sequestration in oysters, so the oyster shells become a geological storage for CO². Recently, Exxon and Chevron and others were taking carbon and storing it underground. They’ve leased a bunch of land in Chambers County for that purpose, but they have to monitor it forever. Oysters consume the CO², they build their shell, the shell becomes part of the reef, and as long as it’s not messed with, that’s a geological storage for carbon,” he affirmed.