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Published on 04/14/16

Georgia 4-H to combat erosion at Tybee Island's Burton 4-H Center

By Merritt Melancon

Georgia 4-H is recruiting an army of bivalves to help ensure the future of the organization’s coastal environmental education center. The organization is working with University of Georgia Marine Extension to encourage new oyster beds along the marshy shoreline at Burton 4-H Center on Tybee Island, Georgia.

In early April, dozens of volunteers spent a Saturday morning filling bags with oyster shells. These bagged shells will be placed along the shoreline to create a new habitat for wild oysters and spur the creation of new oyster reefs along the marsh’s edge.

This new living shoreline, built from six truckloads of oyster shells along about 500 feet of marsh front, should resist erosion, create and improve the wildlife habitat, improve water quality and help mitigate sea level rise.

“A couple of years ago, we realized that the Horse Pen Creek was encroaching on most of the buildings at Burton 4-H Center,” said Arch Smith, director of Georgia 4-H, which is part of UGA Cooperative Extension. “We began working with engineers to develop a solution to reduce the erosion of the creek bank and settled upon a solution that adds an educational component as well.”

Building the living shoreline will provide an opportunity for 4-H environmental education program instructors to use it as a teaching tool for the 8,000 school students that visit Burton 4-H Center annually and study coastal habitats and issues. Burton 4-H Center is one of five facilities operated by Georgia 4-H that provide environmental education programs.

The process of designing and getting permitting approval for the living shoreline project started more than a year ago and will likely take several years for it to be fully stabilized as a natural oyster reef, said Mark Risse, director of UGA Marine Extension.

Volunteers packed discarded oyster shells, a byproduct of the seafood industry, into perforated, Naltex (a marine-safe plastic) bags. The bags will then be packed onto the shoreline. The old shells will create the skeleton for a new oyster bed, which looks like a mound of oysters protruding from the marsh’s muddy bottom.

Eastern oysters, which are native to the estuaries on the Georgia coast, reproduce in the summer. The bags of shells will serve as a scaffold and habitat for these young oysters, which are called “spat.”

The goal is to have all of the bags of oyster shells in place in time for this year’s spat to find their new home.

“We want to get the shells out there as soon as possible so that the spat can settle into the new habitat,” Risse said. “It’s usually two or three years down the road before you get a fully established oyster reef. You’ll see the bags this summer, but hopefully, by winter, you’ll see new oysters setting up along the tops. In two or three years, you won’t see the bags at all.”

A living shoreline created by oysters is superior to a concrete or rock bulkhead commonly used to secure an eroding coastal shoreline because of its resilience and the ecosystem services it provides.

An oyster reef can provide a habitat for 70 to 80 different species of aquatic animals and helps to increase the quality of estuary waters.

“We’re putting out a habitat and a food source that’s going to house and feed other species,” Risse said. “Also, oysters will respond to sea level rise. Oysters will be able to move up with the water level, where a bulkhead would just be swamped.”

Georgia 4-H is building the shoreline with support from UGA Marine Extension, Georgia Sea Grant and the UGA Office of the Vice President for Public Service and Outreach. Coastal Civil Engineering was hired by Georgia 4-H to develop the construction plan. The Carl Vinson Institute of Government, The Nature Conservancy, the Five Star and Urban Waters Restoration Grant Program and the City of Tybee Island are supporting this project.

Merritt Melancon is a public relations manager with UGA's Terry College of Business and previously served as a public relations coordinator for the UGA College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and UGA Extension.

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