Summer in New England means lobster rolls, fried seafood and, of course, freshly shucked oysters. But there’s a problem. Those empty shells usually end up in a dumpster instead of back in the water, where they play a key role in the oyster life cycle.
Oyster larvae attach to shells, where they grow into adults and form reefs that improve water quality, prevent coastal erosion and create habitat for other marine life. Two men in Connecticut are working to fix that. They’ve started a statewide program to collect discarded shells from local restaurants, dry them and return them to Long Island Sound for restoration projects.
is to environmental problems. More to come this year. “We fill that missing piece,” said Tim Macklin, a co-founder of Collective Oyster Recycling & Restoration, the nonprofit group leading the effort.
It’s one of several shell recycling programs that have emerged to help reverse the steep decline in oyster populations along U.S. coastlines, a drop that experts largely attribute to overharvesting, habitat degradation and disease.
Some of the largest programs process more than a million pounds of shell each year. Tell Us About Solutions Where You Live We are having trouble retrieving the article content. Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.
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Environment
Connecticut Shell Recyclers Are Helping Oysters

A nonprofit group is rescuing shells from restaurant trash bins and using them to rebuild oyster habitat in Long Island Sound.