Australian Pelican on a sandy spit exposed by low tide in Oyster Harbour, Albany © Tony Jupp/TNC

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Oyster reefs to reclaim their Albany namesake

Media Contacts

  • Tony Jupp
    Associate Director of Communications
    Email: tjupp@tnc.org

After nearly 150 years without them, Oyster Harbour near Albany, Western Australia, is to be reinstated with oyster reefs thanks to a new project launched today by The Nature Conservancy and the Western Australian State Government. 

Once abundant throughout the bays and estuaries of southern Australia from Perth to Sydney, 99% of Australian Flat Oyster reefs have been wiped out since European settlement through over exploitation. The Nature Conservancy is working to correct this situation with successful projects underway to restore these lost reefs, and all the benefits they bring, in Port Phillip Bay, Victoria and Gulf St Vincent, South Australia.

Launching the Oyster Harbour project today, a first in WA, Fisheries Minister Hon Dave Kelly MLA said “this very exciting and innovative project begins to deliver on our election commitment to improve recfishing, biodiversity and water quality in Oyster Harbour. The project is funded by the McGowan Government and supported by the State’s Albany Shellfish Hatchery, where Australian Flat Oyster spat will be grown before they are used to stock the new reef habitat.”

“We’re really excited to be able to launch our latest shellfish reef restoration project here in the Great Southern”, added Alex Hams, TNC’s recently appointed Marine Project Coordinator based in Albany. “By reinstating these lost shellfish reefs we’ll be able to improve local fish stocks and use the natural filtration power of oysters to improve water quality in the Harbour”.

For millennia before the arrival of Europeans, the Menang Noongar Traditional Owners made use of Oyster Harbour, known as Merrytch in the local dialect, for its rich marine resources after a winter inland sheltering from the harsher weather and living off the land. In Oyster Harbour and the Kalgan River, they made stone traps to catch fish as the tide went out, adding seafood to a diet of bushmeat, birds’ eggs and plants.

Quote: Alex Hams

By 2020 we hope to have restored Australian Flat Oyster reefs totalling one hectare of the Oyster Harbour sea floor

Former Marine Project Coordinator

Led by The Nature Conservancy, with $1.15 million in funding from the WA State Government*, the project is also supported by Recfishwest, South Coast NRM, the University of Western Australia, the Great Southern Development Commission and the City of Albany.

* This Project is made possible by Royalty for Regions and the Recreational Fishing Initiatives Fund.

The Nature Conservancy is a global conservation organisation dedicated to conserving the lands and waters on which all life depends. Guided by science, we focus on getting things done efficiently and with the greatest positive impact for conservation. We’re a trusted organisation working in more than 70 countries and territories around the world on innovative solutions to our world’s toughest challenges so that nature and people can thrive together. To learn more about The Nature Conservancy in Australia, follow us on Facebook.