Transforming Australian Shellfish Production: Hastings River

January 10, 2024
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Lower Limeburners Creek harvest area, Hastings River

Report

Transforming Australian Shellfish Production: Hastings River

Lower Limeburners Creek harvest area, Hastings River

January 10, 2024
-

This report presents results from the Hastings River, one of the estuaries selected as part of Stage 1 of the NSW Oyster Industry Transformation Project 2017-2021. To predict the impact of rainfall on potentially pathogenic bacteria, Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) and oyster disease, precise environmental data with a high temporal frequency were collected and modelled. Combined with state-of-the-art molecular genetic methods, this information will help to improve efficiency and transparency in food safety regulation, provide predictive information and provide insights for more informed and responsive management of shellfish aquaculture.

The project team installed a real-time sensor into Lower Limeburners Creek harvest area, Hastings River, recording high-resolution temperature, salinity and depth data. Oyster farmers collected weekly biological samples (654 environmental DNA samples and 273 deployed/retrieved oysters for growth assessment) from the sensor site. They developed a rapid molecular qPCR (quantitative polymerase chain reaction) assay for E. coli, which could directly compare to the currently used plate count by commercial laboratories. The team also developed specific qPCR assays that could determine which animals were contributing to the E. coli load in the river system. They used these assays to observe trends in faecal pollution and modelled these in relation to environmental variables (salinity, temperature, rainfall, nutrients etc.), to develop predictive models. Finally, the project team developed an additional model to link oyster growth with environmental variables and assessed its predictive capability.

Read the full report here.

Non-project publications

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