Hampton Harbor Project

(Hampton Harbor, NH)
From November 2001 to December
2006, DEI and the University of Maine at Machias received funding from
the New Hampshire Estuaries Project to examine the reasons for high
mortality of soft-shell clam juveniles in the Hampton Harbor region, and
to determine whether it would be possible to enhance recreational flats
in that area with hatchery-reared soft-shell clam seed. Two series of
tests were conducted. The first study was conducted from November 2001
to July 2002 and ruled out disease and winterkill as significant
contributors to the lack of wild soft-shell clam seed. Instead, most
clam losses were caused by predators (mostly the green crab) and
sediment scouring. The second study -- from November 2004 to November
2006-- examined the interactive effects of predator exclusion netting,
netting aperture size, and planting area on clam growth and survival.
Clam survival was not affected by the planting area (4 m2 –
18 m2), and enhancement was 100x more successful in plots
surrounded by predator deterrent netting than plots that received no
netting. A strategy for enhancing flats in the Hampton-Seabrook
Estuary was presented and a demonstration enhancement project with
clammers was developed.
Upper tier of four photos:
In the first study, hatchery seed was planted in six-inch diameter
plastic plant pots that were placed level with the sandy sediment
surface at each of three flats near Hampton Harbor. Clam density (330,
660, and 1320 per m2) and predator netting (present vs.
absent) were varied at each site. At the end of the trial, the contents
of each pot were sieved through a 1 mm mesh and the number and sizes of
the clams recorded.
Middle tier of four photos:
Hatchery-reared clams produce a distinct disturbance ring at the time of
their planting. The ring enables researchers to determine the growth
rate of surviving individuals without physically marking the animals.
Here, clams have nearly doubled in size during the field trial. Placing
large nets onto sandy flats is challenging work because a deep furrow
must be dug around the perimeter of the seeded area. Staff and clammers
used clam hoes as well as shovels to complete the work. Once the net is
placed over the seed clams, the edge of the net must be buried by
filling in the furrow with the sediment. In this photo, planters are
using their feet to accomplish that task. The seed produced at DEI for
this experiment ranged in size from 8 to 12 mm in shell length.
Lower left: An
experiment at The Willows flat (Hampton, New Hampshire) to examine the
effect of planting area on clam growth and survival.
Lower middle: Clam holes
under 1/8th-inch plastic netting.
Lower right:
Nets being placed around plots of seeded clams in June 2005 at The
Willows flat.