Achieve an annual net gain of at least 500 acres approved for shellfish harvesting, based on a three-year rolling average.
This indicator tracks changes in the classification of harvestable shellfish beds in Puget Sound. The Washington State Department of Health classifies 115 shellfish growing areas in Puget Sound to assure that harvested shellfish are safe to consume. The data collected for the classification process represent the conditions that dictate shellfish harvest, and their trends provide information on marine water quality in Puget Sound.
Area (acres) of harvestable shellfish beds where the Washington Department of Health classification has changed. Upgrades in classification mean that water quality has improved, allowing for fewer restrictions on shellfish harvest. Downgrades mean there are either more restrictions on when shellfish may be harvested, or harvest is not allowed.
The Puget Sound nearshore is home to an amazing abundance of oysters, clams, mussels, and other shellfish that provide opportunities for recreational shellfish harvest and form the basis for a multi-million dollar natural resource-based industry that supports thousands of jobs.
Washington State Department of Health, Shellfish Growing Areas Program
Washington State Department of Health, Office of Environmental Health and Safety
The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) classifies 115 different shellfish growing areas in Puget Sound, covering roughly 250,000 acres. Growing area classifications are assigned based on the results of a shoreline survey, marine water quality sampling, and analysis of pollutants in the area.
Commercial growing area classifications:
Upgrades in classification mean that water quality has improved, allowing for fewer restrictions on shellfish harvest. Any shellfish beds classified as conditionally approved, restricted, or prohibited whose status is upgraded, results in newly harvestable acres and are counted toward the recovery target.
Downgrades mean there are either more restrictions on when shellfish may be harvested or no harvest is allowed at any time. Downgrades are generally caused by fecal bacteria or other pollutants in the water that make shellfish unsafe to eat.
The shellfish harvest area classification process is defined in federal rules and adopted in state regulations. DOH implements the rules at the state level. The purpose of the DOH Shellfish Growing Areas Program is to assure that harvested shellfish are safe to consume. This also includes making certain that pollution sources are continually assessed and marine water quality monitored around every classified harvest area. The data collected for the classification process represent the conditions that dictate shellfish harvest, and their trends provide information on marine water quality in Puget Sound.
DOH samples more than 1,700 marine water stations between 6 and 12 times each year for fecal coliform bacteria, salinity, and temperature. A minimum of 30 of the most recent samples from each marine water station are used to classify each shellfish harvesting area. In addition, shoreline pollution sources, including wastewater treatment plants, individual on-site sewage systems, marinas, farms, and any other activity with the potential to impact the shellfish area, are evaluated periodically and results are integrated in the classification process.
Classifications and their definitions:
The total net change in harvestable shellfish beds for all of Puget Sound in 2023 was 432 acres. Click here (or download from Datasets below) for a list of all upgrades and downgrades since 2007.
In 2023 Washington Department of Health (DOH) upgraded the harvest classification at four growing areas:
In 2023 DOH needed to downgrade two growing areas:
In 2022 DOH upgraded the harvest classification at just two growing areas:
In 2022 DOH needed to downgrade five growing areas:
Downgrades in 2022 at Port Susan and Drayton Harbor follow downgrades at these growing areas in 2021 (183 acres downgraded at Port Susan and 693 acres downgraded at Drayton Harbor). Both areas are impacted by significant freshwater stream flows that carry pollution from sources throughout the watershed into the nearshore.
Since 2007, the baseline reference year, sanitary conditions in some shellfish harvest areas improved enough to change their classifications for the better, and they were upgraded (cumulative total was 14,981 acres as of January 2024). However, others changed for the worse and were downgraded (cumulative total of 8,760 acres, over 4,000 acres of which was in Samish Bay). The net result was an increase of 6,221 acres with fewer restrictions on shellfish harvest for all of Puget Sound.
More than 35,000 acres (14%) of shellfish harvest areas are classified as Prohibited due to the proximity of pollution sources or poor water quality. Shellfish harvest on most of this acreage is prohibited because of a nearby wastewater treatment plant outfall. Marinas and nonpoint source pollution, such as excess fertilizers from agricultural lands, oil and toxic chemicals from urban runoff, and bacteria and nutrients from livestock, pet wastes and faulty septic systems, are other factors that could impact public health and prohibit shellfish harvest.
Classification | Definition | Acreage |
---|---|---|
Approved: commercial harvest for direct marketing |
Sanitary survey shows the area is not subject to contamination that presents an actual or potential public health hazard. |
148,737 |
Conditionally Approved: opened or closed for predictable periods of time |
Meets Approved criteria some of the time but does not during predictable periods. The length of closure is based on data that show the amount of time it takes for water quality to recover and again meet Approved criteria. |
12,364 |
Restricted: cannot be marketed directly and must be transplanted to Approved growing areas for a specified amount of time |
Meets standards for an Approved criteria, but the sanitary survey indicates a limited degree of pollution from non-human sources. Harvest must be transplanted to Approved growing areas to allow shellfish to naturally cleanse themselves of contaminants before they can be marketed. |
63,490 |
Prohibited: closed to commercial and recreational harvest |
When the sanitary survey indicates harmful substances may be present in concentrations that pose a health risk. Growing areas that have not undergone a sanitary survey are also classified as prohibited. |
35,099 |
Total | 259,690 |
Pollutants, marine pathogens, and naturally occurring marine biotoxins (paralytic shellfish poison or domoic acid) can all restrict shellfish harvest opportunities (Dethier 2006). Shoreline pollution sources, including wastewater treatment plants, failing onsite sewage systems, marinas, farms and animal waste, and other activities can negatively impact the shellfish areas and lead to human health risks. Many commercial shellfish beds in Puget Sound have been closed due to pollution and bacterial contamination and shellfish harvest is prohibited along the entire eastern shore of Puget Sound from Tacoma to Everett.
Downgrades and closures of shellfish harvest areas have been offset since 2007, the indicator's baseline reference year, by classification upgrades largely due to better pollution controls and related improvements in water quality, including:
Since 2011, DOH has invested over $35 million in grants around Puget Sound funded by the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) National Estuary Program to help improve water quality. These grants support pollution identification and correction projects, on-site septic system management programs, research, and shellfish protection districts. These efforts combined with other local and state funds have gone a long way to protect and improve water quality around Washington’s shellfish beds.
Although the Sound-wide trend in improvement is positive, many factors affect the long-term ability to protect and improve harvestable shellfish beds. The Shellfish Beds Implementation Strategy outlines key barriers to improvement and potential approaches to increase acreage safe for shellfish harvest. To date, implementation of effective pollution identification and correction (PIC) programs, agricultural best management practices, and on-site sewage system operation and maintenance programs have resulted in the correction of pollution sources. These corrections have led to improved water quality and upgraded shellfish acreage.
The significant downgrade of the Samish Bay shellfish growing area in 2011 impacted the overall net acreage gained and slowed progress toward the 2020 target. Through the work of the Clean Samish Initiative, many improvements have been recorded throughout the watershed. The Clean Samish Initiative is a coalition of federal, state, and county governments, Indian tribes, non-governmental organizations, shellfish growers, and private citizens dedicated to reducing fecal coliform pollution in the Samish Bay Watershed. This successful, collaborative effort continues its pollution abatement work, with special emphasis on linking landowners with resources to help them reduce the risk of pollution from their property. Challenges remain, however. The Samish River directs stream flows from a large watershed into Samish Bay. These freshwater flows also carry pollution accumulated from a variety of sources in the watershed which can lead to unsafe conditions for shellfish harvest in the Bay.
Dethier, M.N. 2006. Native Shellfish in Nearshore Ecosystems of Puget Sound. Puget Sound Nearshore Partnership Report No. 2006-04. Published by Seattle District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Seattle, Washington.
Skagit County, Clean Water Program: Clean Samish Initiative
Shellfish Beds Indicator Data, presentation to the Marine Waters PSEMP Work Group, Feb. 2021
The Puget Sound Partnership believes in the transparency and accessibility of the data used to address puget sound indicators. These data are provided by contributing partners to the Partnership and are made publicly available through the Puget Sound Info site. These data are available on an "as is" basis and the Partnership is not responsible for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies. Please acknowledge the monitoring program and data source when using these data and obtain permission from the Vital Sign Indicator Reporter to use these data in a publication.
Not applicable to Vital Sign indicators
Name | |
---|---|
Classification change |
Upgrades, Downgrades, Cumulative net change
|