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6. Cedar Island Marina, Inc.
Marina Habitat Assessment and Scallop
Farming
| Location: |
Riverside Drive, P.O.Box 181, Clinton, CT 06413 |
| Telephone: |
(860) 669-8681, fax: (860) 669-4157 |
| Interviewed: |
Jeffrey Shapiro, President |
| Owned by: |
Shapiro Family Trusts |
| Waterbody: |
Clinton Harbor, Long Island Sound |
Environmental change
Ten years of private ecology research has demonstrated that recreational
boat full-service marinas are productive artificial reefs and has led to the
development of commercially viable bay scallop aquaculture under marina
docks.
The full-service marina, boatyard, and fish farm
Cedar Island Marina is a family-owned business that calls itself "the family
boating resort." It is a full-service marina/boatyard with 400 slips operating
at 94% capacity in 1995, with many transient visitors filling slips vacated
when homeport vessels are away. Three boats are year-round liveaboards. Boat
sizes range from under 21 feet up to 120 feet, with 76% between 21 and 35 feet,
and 19% longer; 35% are sailboats.
Cedar Island has a staff of 25 year-round employees, which expands to 50
full-timers during the boating season. In addition to slips, the marina has
retail services: ship's store, grocery, ice, bait/tackle, used boat brokerage,
fuel dock, and pumpout. Launch/haulout is available with a 30-ton travel lift
and "giraffe" crane for indoor and outdoor winter boat storage. Full repair
services include fiberglass, hull, and engine repair; painting; sail rigging;
sail making; welding/metal fabrication; and bottom cleaning.
Located in Clinton Harbor, one of the few protected harbors (in southern New
England) not burdened with industry, the resort-like marina is 1 mile from the
entrance buoy to Long Island Sound and borders the Hammonasset Nature Preserve.
Its customer amenities include a laundry, 60-foot swimming pool, sauna,
whirlpool, picnic grounds, saltwater beach, snack bar, 275-seat restaurant,
poolside bands, night security, cable TV, and a children's activity director.
On a busy summer weekend approximately 40% of the boats are in use, occupied,
or under way out of the harbor; about 20% of the boats have people sleeping
overnight.
Within a 2-mile radius, there are 8 other marinas and boatyards with an
estimated total boat population of 2,000. The prime boating season starts in
May and ends in October. Cedar Island Marina was bought by the Shapiro family
in 1974 and converted from a fuel terminal built in 1964. Jeffrey Shapiro is
also a general partner in the Clinton Harbor Boat Show each July-another major
focus of attention, publicity, and potential customer draw to his marina.
Management measures
Cedar Island Marina complies with the marina management measures for water
quality assessment and habitat assessment, as well as marina flushing,
shoreline stabilization, storm water runoff control, fueling station design,
sewage facility, sewage facility maintenance, solid waste, liquid materials,
petroleum control, and public education.
Costs/benefits
In 1995, Cedar Island Marina spent $38,500 to staff and operate its private
marina research laboratory, including two full-time marine biologists. Its
aquaculture project and public display aquariums attracted new boating families
into slips for the season and helped retain other customers, resulting in an
estimated $46,000 gross slip income. The special docks designed by Cedar Island
for the aquaculture project cost the company no more than conventional docks.
Marina management estimates that the aquaculture project brings them around
$5,000 worth of publicity each year and has extended their dredging season,
saving another $5,000 annually.
Environmental improvements
When the State of Connecticut turned down Cedar Island Marina's request for
an additional 396 slips in 1988 because the expansion would be "destroying
valuable marina life and habitat," little did anyone realize what positive
effects would result after Jeffrey Shapiro accepted the challenge. "We decided
to prove Connecticut wrong because I was convinced that the marina would
improve-not destroy-the harbor's habitat. So I began hiring environmental
consultants to test what was happening in and under the marina waters here."
That effort has turned into a full-time marina ecology research laboratory with
two full-time scientists. Thirteen technical reports were published and/or
presented at professional estuarine, fisheries management, and Long Island
Sound conferences between 1989 and 1995.
| With removable center panels, marine
biologists check to growth of scallops in traps suspended below the Cedar
Island Marina's floating docks. |
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The Cedar Island Marine Research Laboratory is entirely owned, operated, and
funded as part of Cedar Island Marina. Its laboratory and in-water field
station are also in the marina. Studies have included assessment and long-term
monitoring of water quality (temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen), marina
habitat, coastal birds, and finfish communities (particularly juvenile winter
flounder, Pseudopleuronectes americanus) in the marina, as compared to other
natural habitats in Clinton Harbor.
"Testing has proven that our marina's waters have good oxygen levels and
lower coliform counts than those at the town beach. And heavy metals did not
accumulate in scallops growing on the marina bottom," Jeffrey Shapiro stated.
"Also the periwinkle snails-a favorite food of winter flounder-are 20 times
more abundant on the marina's dredged bottom than on the neighboring mud flats,
which helps explain why we have a 10-times larger population of baby flounder
under our docks than elsewhere in the harbor."
Studies in recent years-performed in cooperation with the marine
laboratories of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Connecticut Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP), and Connecticut Sea Grant-have focused on the
marina habitat with special emphasis on its finfish nursery and shellfish
aquaculture potential.
Noticing that many marine species grew more rapidly and remained healthy
under marina docks and boats, Shapiro's lab staff started growing shellfish on
trays suspended below the floating docks. Indeed, they grew faster than those
placed in neighboring natural marsh flats and were just as safe for human
consumption. Oysters, it was determined, could be grown to market size 1 year
quicker under boat docks than outside the marina basin. (Note: Cedar Island's
research under marina docks is consistent with that done by others on
hard-shell clams in Rhode Island and finfish in Washington.)
But two key factors inhibited use of marinas for oyster farming. First, U.S.
Food and Drug Administration standards require the filter-feeding oysters to be
relocated to "clean" waters for several months of depuration before being
eaten, and that extra handling is costly. Second, oysters take 4 years to grow
to market size. Shapiro switched to another shellfish-bay scallops-and seems to
have solved those problems.
In the spring of 1995, with some Connecticut Sea Grant funds and in-kind
technical help from state and federal marine biologists, Cedar Island Marine
Research Laboratory bought 6,000 baby bay scallops, each about the diameter of
a pencil (measured as 1,000 per liter). The scallops were distributed inside
plastic mesh bags placed into three-level wire cages hung beneath special 60-ft
floating aquaculture docks designed and built by Cedar Island Marina. Deck trap
doors open to allow access to each shellfish cage for easy removal. Every 4
weeks, each cage is pulled. The mesh bags are opened, and the scallops are
counted, measured, lightly brushed to remove fouling growth, and separated into
more bags, but with fewer scallops per bag to allow expanded growing space.
By late September, all the scallops had grown to market size averaging 3
inches each. Asked what the mortality rate had been, research manager Matthew
Mroczka answered, "I expected about a 30% death rate, but so far have lost
4-not percent-only 4 scallops, leaving 5,996 still alive and growing!"
Aquaculture typically has higher survival rates than those in nature, often
because of protection from predators, but Cedar Island's demonstration is truly
remarkable.
"Now for the good part of why scallops are better than oysters here," said
Shapiro. "When most shellfish are eaten, we consume all the meat and stomach,
including whatever the animal's last meals included. But we only eat the large
muscle of the scallop with the stomach thrown away. So the concerns about water
quality do not apply the same way for scallops. Second, the scallop lives only
one year from seed to maturity. So producing shellfish for market is largely
done during one boating season."
"Today, each 3-inch scallop retails at 50¢, so if we sold this year's
crop, we would gross $3,000. However, because the seed, costing $72, was paid
for with a federal grant, we will turn them over to the University of
Connecticut. But we will keep some of the biggest ones (which grew fastest) to
become our breeding stock for 1996. And we will expand the number of scallops
and cages. We are happy with it," Shapiro said. "Next year we're going to make
money on it in a business way. And each year we'll select our fastest-growing
scallops as breeders for the next generation, much as farmers select their best
seed and animals for breeding."
"For 30 years there has been no commercial scallop fishery in the state. But
within specially designed docks at Cedar Island Marina could be the seeds of a
reborn commercial fishery."-The Hartford Courant, September 23, 1995.
Other benefits
Another clear business benefit derived from the lab work is that Cedar
Island Marina is permitted to do its annual dredging, to maintain -8 feet MLW,
during non-winter months. (All other marinas on Long Island Sound are limited
to dredging in bitter cold months.) "Our environmental database, particularly
the juvenile winter flounder data, helped convinced the state to extend our
marina maintenance dredging season beyond the February 1 deadline to June 1,
which gives a $5,000 cost saving by spot dredging in warmer weather."
| Aquaculture wire mesh traps
protect scallop seed from predaors and hold multi-levels of trays |
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This unusual marine research laboratory, owned and operated by a private
commercial full-service marina, is unique in the world. Shapiro admits that it
is unlikely that most other marinas could afford such a sustained scientific
effort. "I learned that it was more cost-effective to hire full-time biologists
rather than hiring consultants at $100 per hour. We've been spending over
$30,000 annually for 5 to 6 years, and
are now only really starting to see a [business] return." But the Cedar Island
Marine Research Laboratory's published reports will benefit the entire marina
industry internationally for many years.
To demonstrate the marine life diversity in the boating facility, the lab
staff stocks and maintains a 400-gallon saltwater aquarium in the marina
office. It is a major attraction for children and parents. "Many boats arrive
for fuel and pumpout at Cedar Island's dock just so the kids can run to the
office to see the aquarium with all that stuff living under their docks,"
Shapiro said proudly. "We set up a large marine touch tank during the Clinton
Harbor Boat Show in late July. There were 5,000 people visiting the show, and
our tank was the biggest attraction in the exhibit. It really impacts boater
behavior not to throw trash or oil overboard. It also attracts visitors who
heard about our aquarium. We get a chance to educate people about our
environment."
"We got a $3,000 pumpout grant to add a second portable pump and 250-gallon
holding tank for our fuel dock," Shapiro said. "We use a large 3-inch-diameter
diaphragm pump and hose to give us greater suction and faster speed. We charge
$5.00 for a pumpout done by our dockhands, but it is free for our slip renters.
As a staff incentive, at the end of the season each year I recognize the staff
member who did the most pumpouts with a personalized 'Pumpout King Award' and
his/her name added to the plaque hanging in the fuel dock office. I started
this in 1989 at the suggestion of two dock boys who were competing to get the
most pumpouts that summer. The winner that year is listed first, then the other
returned in 1990 determined to win-and he did-so his name is second. They like
the competition." Asking every boat at the fuel dock to have a pumpout is part
of the staff's written job description.
Also at the fuel dock, "An oil absorption boom, attached to a painter
extension pole, lays on one end of the dock. Whenever a small spill occurs
during fueling, the dockhand grabs the pole and pulls the 30-foot boom over the
petroleum and moves it around until all the spill is absorbed, much like a mop
would."
Waste oil and batteries are collected at the service area for recycling.
This gives people a convenient place to bring their used oil, instead of
throwing it into the dumpster or on the ground.
Gravel permeable parking and work areas help control runoff pollution.
Landscaping in the public areas around the stores, pool, and restaurant makes a
nice, clean marina atmosphere for boaters.
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