Gold medallist sailor champions oyster restoration
An Olympic gold medallist has
joined conservation efforts to restore oyster populations in
the Solent, as his team gears up to race on the same waters
in this season's SailGP.
Dylan
Fletcher, who helms Great Britain's team, said it was vital
to protect the marine environment sailors share with
hundreds of species that live in the strait between the Isle
of Wight and Hampshire. The global competition returns
to English shores in July for the first time in three years,
with GB currently second in the standings, just one point
behind Australia.
"We all need to do our little bit
to make the world a better place," said Fletcher.
The Olympic sailor, who won gold at
Tokyo 2020 in the 49ers class, has been joined by teammates,
conservationists and children from Emsworth Primary School
to learn about the Solent Oyster Restoration Project.
He said: "It's incredible projects
like this that are now rejuvenating the oceans and are
bringing the native oysters back here into Emsworth.
"It's why we're really trying to
show what is possible, that we all need to do our little bit
to make the world a better place."
Fletcher said having a SailGP event
in Portsmouth was "massive", adding: "We've got a grandstand
that can hold 20,000 people, so I'm hoping we'll have some
good conditions, showcase sailing and show how fun it is to
watch.
"We're really happy with where we
are at the moment. It's ultimately a long season, but we'd
love to take the win in Portsmouth."
But while attention builds for the
high-speed races, the Solent was once home to a different
kind of activity as the site of Europe's largest oyster
fishery.
Two men in blue t-shirts stand
either side of another man wearing a light blue top, who is
leaning over a table on top of which are several plastic
trays containing small items. He is handing an item to a
young girl who is sitting the other side of the table in
between other children. In the background is a marina with
several moored boats and tall trees behind those.
Fletcher's teammates,
conservationists and children from Emsworth Primary School
joined him to learn about the project
Fletcher's teammate Kai Hockley
said the restoration project had made a strong impression.
"I've learnt so much about how
oysters help the Solent," he said. "With all the
biodiversity it has, we need to make sure to protect it, to
keep our Solent as good as it is."
The Blue Marine Foundation, which
runs the project, said oyster numbers in the Solent have
collapsed due to pollution, disease and overfishing.
The aim is to boost biodiversity
and water quality but it would also help revive the Solent's
former ecological and economic role.
Dr Luke Helmer, from the project,
said: "We used to have Europe's largest fishery back in the
70s and 80s, with around 15 million oysters being taken,
which is unfortunately now closed.
"That was about 840 tonnes a year.
It was a huge industry that supported about 700 workers.
"What we're trying to do now is
restore it - not only for that but for the environmental
benefits, an adult oyster can filter 100 to 150 litres of
water a day."
The project team is currently
checking out a new four-hectare seabed reef in Chichester,
which could home hundreds of thousands of oysters.
"I think it's really important that
all marine users get involved in this, nobody wants to be
playing or swimming in muddy waters, and oysters have an
important role to play in that," said Dr Helmer.
BBC South 24th May
https://www.bluemarinefoundation.com/projects/solent/
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