Farming Hard Shell Clams

(Trenton, ME)
In February 2006, the Maine
Technology Institute funded a request by DEI to examine the hatchery,
nursery, and overwintering phases of hard clams, Mercenaria
mercenaria. Typically, this species of clam is associated with a
geographic region that stretches from Florida to Massachusetts. There
is, however, a small commercial population of hard clams in Frenchmen’s
Bay in Hancock County. A clammer from Blue Hill, Mr. Joseph Porada,
contacted DEI in December 2005 saying he wanted to pursue a hard clam
farming venture in Goose Cove in the town of Trenton. In its first
business incubator project, the Institute helped Mr. Porada obtain three
2-acre experimental leases for the purposes of farming hard clams. The
photos show the efforts to produce and grow hard clam seed to planting
sizes on Great Wass Island.
Upper left: Adult,
commercial size hard clams from Goose Cove, Trenton.
Upper right: During the
winter of 2006, DEI conditioned hard clam broodstock from Goose Cove to
spawn earlier than normal. DEI accomplished this by growing cultured
algae and feeding it to the broodstock over a 2-month period.
Lower left: Hard clams
were sandwiched between pieces of rigid netting and placed into tanks of
seawater maintained at 70oF from February to April. Then,
animals were stimulated to spawn. DEI staff raised the swimming larvae
for 2 weeks in large tanks and then reared the juveniles to a size of
approximately 2 millimeters.
Lower middle: Once the
hard clam juveniles reached 2 mm, DEI staff transferred them to wooden
trays lined with window screening and took them to the Institute’s ocean
grow-out site at Mud Hole Cove on Great Wass Island.
Lower right: Dr. Brian
Beal, DEI’s director of research, designed an experiment to examine the
effect of stocking density on hard clam growth and survival. Using a
total of 80 trays, staff filled 20 trays each with 2,500, 5,000, 7,500
and 10,000 seed clams. The trays were at Mud Hole Cove from July through
mid-November when the average size of the hard clams reached
approximately 8 mm – a 6mm increase. Stocking density did influence
final size. Animals held at the lower densities (2,500 and 5,000 per
tray) were slightly larger than those held at the higher densities.
Survival was nearly 100%. The photo shows a handful of seed hard clams
(about 250) from one of the trays at Mud Hole Cove in September 2006.