Oyster Essays

  • The Oyster Population of the The Chesapeake Bay

    2779 Words  | 6 Pages

    its oysters. Oysters are filter feeders which mean they feed on agley and clean the water. The oysters feed on agley and other pollutants in the bay turning them into food for them, then they condense the food down to nutrient and developed things like pearls.Filtering the water also helps the oyster to grow. One oyster can filter 50 gallons of water a day, Oysters used to be able to filter the Bay in about a week. However these creatures are now scarce in the bay. The Chesapeake Bays Oyster (crassostrea

  • The Cause and Effect of the Chesapeake Bay's Oyster Decline on the Bay

    1882 Words  | 4 Pages

    for centuries. One of the Bays biggest resources is its oysters. Oysters are filter feeders which mean they feed on agley and clean the water. The oysters feed on agley and other pollutants in the bay turning them into food, then they condense the food down to nutrients and sometimes developed pearls. Filtering the water helps the oysters to grow, and also helps clean the Chesapeake Bay. One oyster can filter 50 gallons of water a day, Oysters used to be able to filter the Bay in about a week. However

  • Chesapeake Bay Pollution

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    a problem that is causing a large amount of the problem. Species such as the blue crab, oyster, and atlantic menhaden are three main commercial fishing outputs in the Chesapeake bay, but the recent algae blooms are devastating the harvest numbers of several different species. According to the oyster company of Virginia, over 20 million bushels of oysters were harvested every year during the peak of the oyster rush of the mid 1880’s. These numbers

  • The Pearl Figurative Language Essay

    1138 Words  | 3 Pages

    The irony of the passage also relates to the symbolism of the pearl. Ironically, the bed of oysters, which empowers Kino, is the same one that funded the King of Spain. Therefore, the pearl is associated with both light and royalty. Moreover, the symbolism of the pearl is clear when the narrator states: “But the pearls were accidents, and the finding

  • The Importance Of The Chesapeake Bay In The United States

    2817 Words  | 6 Pages

    bays biggest resources is oysters. Oysters are filter feeders which mean they pump water through their gills trapping algae, sediments and nutrients as they release clean the water back into the bay. The material collected through the oysters digestive process forms crystallized layers of nutrient rich matter which sometimes develop into pearls. Filtering the water provides food for the the oysters to grow and also helps to continuously clean the Chesapeake Bay. One oyster can filter fifty gallons

  • Chesapeake Bay Essay

    2016 Words  | 5 Pages

    Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. The bay has much to offer the locals. Many locals have made a career out of harvesting the bay's sea food. The bay's harvest and many of its other attractions bring tourists and in turn revenue for the area. Oysters and blue crab are a big part of the culture in the bay area. However, these organisms are in danger and need help. Description of the problem Eutrophication is a concern in the Chesapeake Bay. Eutrophication is caused by excessive amounts of nutrients

  • Watermen on the Chesepeake Bay

    540 Words  | 2 Pages

    early(at sunrise) and depending on the catch, they may have to travel several miles to the fishing or harvesting grounds. In the summer their main catch is crab, and in the spring, fall, and winter they fish for a variety of different fishes, eels and oysters. Throughout the year the watermen fish in all kinds of weather. If the waterman do not work, whether it be from sickness or injury, th...

  • Environmental Economic Impact of Pollution in the Chesapeake Bay

    2754 Words  | 6 Pages

    Chesapeake Bay has suffered from elevated levels of pollution. Nitrogen and phosphorous from wastewater treatment plants, farmland, air pollution, and development all lead to reduced water clarity and lowered oxygen levels, which harm fish, crabs, oysters and underwater grasses (Key Commission Issues 1). There are other types of pollution in the bay such as toxic chemicals, but because nutrient pollution is the most significant and most widespread in the Bay its effects are the most harmful to fisheries

  • Invasive or Exotic Species

    670 Words  | 2 Pages

    Chesapeake Bay region and that these alterations aren’t always predictable! For instance, Oysters in the Chesapeake Bay have suffered since their parasites Dermo and MSX were introduced into the area as exotics.(3) Oysters fundamental role is to abolish the algae in the water; yet with the decline of oysters there is a major demolish in the bay ecosystem. (3) This is not just affecting the bay, it is also affecting oyster fishery bringing much economic loss. (3) Other examples would include the mute swan;

  • The Oyster and the Pearl

    693 Words  | 2 Pages

    that it is right to allow Clay to believe that there is a pearl in the oyster? Explain your answer. Ans. Clay is a poor, innocent boy. He wants money to put in an ad for his disappeared father. His father had left home a month ago. Clay knew that the basic reason for his leaving home was money which was a constant cause of dispute between his mother and father. Harry's effort to give the boy a hope of a pearl in the oyster is the virtuous act of human side of him. Perhaps no happiness could have

  • Background Of Amazing Oysters

    944 Words  | 2 Pages

    Amazing Oysters – The Bay’s Most Valuable Animal Background You might be surprised to learn that the most important animal in the Chesapeake Bay is the oyster. In addition to being a tasty dish on the menu at many seafood restaurants, and an important part of the economy of the Bay area, oysters play a critical role in maintaining the health of the Bay for a variety of reasons. First, oysters are natural water purifiers. Because they are filter feeders, oysters help keep the water in the Bay clear

  • Steps in Mushroom Cultivation

    1119 Words  | 3 Pages

    contaminants. A cre... ... middle of paper ... ...ots=psZWcIr-RN&sig=89w1Eyy-xVf_k45DbIqbtyKrbYE#v=onepage&q&f=false Ogden, A. & Prowse, K. (2004). How to make oyster mushroom grain spawn in a simple way. In R. Gush (Ed.), Mushroom growers’ handbook 1 (pp. 62-74). Seoul, Korea: Mush World. Retrieved from http://www.fungifun.org/mushworld/Oyster-Mushroom-Cultivation/mushroom-growers-handbook-1-mushworld-com-chapter-4-1.pdf Ooi, V. E.C, & Liu, F. (2000). Immunomodulation and anti-cancer activity of polysaccharide-protein

  • Whitstable Oyster Fishery Report

    746 Words  | 2 Pages

    economic development (the likely extension of an existing restaurant on the beach front, and the development and use of beach huts as accommodation for visitors to the restaurant) from its present owners, the entrepreneurial proprietors of the Whitstable Oyster Fishery Company. When trying, in the course of a non-statutory public inquiry, to demonstrate a nexus between local inhabitants and the beach,

  • Work Experience: Shuckers Oyster Bar And Grill

    806 Words  | 2 Pages

    Throughout high school, I worked in a locally owned restaurant, called “Shuckers Oyster Bar and Grill”. The owners were born and raised in the town of Raleigh and the food was based out of the North Carolina’s coast. It was the best seafood that could be found off the coast and maintained a large fan base of customers. In the beginning years of my work experience, I worked as a hostess and a busser. As I gained more insight of the restaurants trifling details, I was able to climb my way up to becoming

  • Mark Doty Still Life With Oysters And Lemons Analysis

    571 Words  | 2 Pages

    the feeling attached to these things, while withholding any narrative….Their associations are long since dead, though something of the personal seems to glow here still” (Doty, 2001, pg. 29). This quote by Mark Doty in his book, “Still life with Oysters and Lemons” helps me analyze the still painting, “Still life with a gilt cup” by Willem Claesz. The first thing that I noticed about the painting was that the colors are very subtle. The painter creates an almost calming, gloomy atmosphere with the

  • Pearl Harvesting: An Environmental Sustainability Study

    1311 Words  | 3 Pages

    This essay is about the process of pearls, how they are taken from oysters and how it relates to environmental sustainability. It will further more discuss the environmental problem that is caused by pearls. Pearls are an example of my discipline of study; Jewellery Design and Manufacture. Academic sources such as Schumacher’s Small is Beautiful (1973), Braungart and McDonough’s Cradle to Cradle (2002), Dawson’s Pearls of Creations (2011), Silvia Malaguzzi’s The Pearl (2001) and Bar and Lam’s Pearls

  • The Walrus and the Carpenter by Lewis Carroll

    627 Words  | 2 Pages

    it,' said the Carpenter, And shed a bitter tear. `O Oysters, come and walk with us!' The Walrus did beseech. `A pleasant walk, a pleasant talk, Along the briny beach: We cannot do with more than four, To give a hand to each.' The eldest Oyster looked at him, But never a word he said: The eldest Oyster winked his eye, And shook his heavy head— Meaning to say he did not choose To leave the oyster-bed. But four young Oysters hurried up, All eager for the treat: Their coats were

  • The Pearl Research Paper

    893 Words  | 2 Pages

    producer of freshwater pearls, they come in a wide range of colors, shapes, sizes, qualities, and price points. The Japanese akoyta pearls are saltwater peals produced by Pinctada Fucata oyster, which is small in size roughly about 8-13cm in diameter; therefore, producing pearls in sizes of 2mm-8mm. The Pinctada Fucata oyster was the first mollusk ever used to commercially culture pearls in the late 1800’s (Pearls in

  • Analysis of Pearls

    922 Words  | 2 Pages

    an oyster or other mollusk. They are grown in limited areas of the world's oceans and come in wide range of shapes and colors. The value of a particular pearl is determined by a number of factors. The prices of these precious stones are widely varied depending on the perfection of the stone. A pearl is a very unique, valuable gem. Pearls were first introduced in the 1850s when they were discovered in Western Australia's Shark Bay. Here the gems were found in the salt water albina oyster, known

  • Themes In Lewis Carroll's Alice In Wonderland

    937 Words  | 2 Pages

    Down the rabbit hole she goes; her curiosity sparked as to why a rabbit could be in such a rush. Alice in Wonderland, a classic tale from 1951: Based on the books Alice Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll. Alice is a child living in the real world, her imagination just too big for others to understand. The story is appealing to young viewers, with animated characters that live in a world where nothing is as it seems, Wonderland. These characters make us laugh, and wish for a place like Wonderland