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Tending the Tides - Oregon's Mariculture Revolution
Episode 108

Tending the Tides - Oregon's Mariculture Revolution

90% of seafood consumed on the Oregon coast is imported, while most Oregon-caught seafood gets exported. This week, we explore how that's changing. We talk with Suzie O'Neill, Kaitlyn Rich, and Jon Bonkoski from Ecotrust, who just launched "Tending the Tides," a podcast about mariculture on the Oregon coast. Learn how oyster farmers became climate sentinels in 2007 when ocean acidification killed their larvae. Discover urchin divers using rock climbing techniques underwater in 50 pounds of lead, and how their catch feeds innovative closed-loop aquaculture systems growing seaweed and sea cucumbers. From selective breeding programs creating climate-resilient oysters to kelp forests buffering acidification, this episode reveals how Oregon is building regenerative ocean farming that honors Indigenous stewardship, avoids parachute science, and redefines what sustainable food systems look like. Featuring the Oregon Coastal Mariculture Collaborative's community-led approach to expanding "unfed aquaculture"—oysters and seaweed that grow without any inputs beyond what the ocean provides.

Ocean Science Radio

February 3, 202628m 23s

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Show Notes

90% of seafood consumed on the Oregon coast is imported, while most Oregon-caught seafood gets exported. This week, we explore how that's changing. We talk with Suzie O'Neill, Kaitlyn Rich, and Jon Bonkoski from Ecotrust, who just launched "Tending the Tides," a podcast about mariculture on the Oregon coast. Learn how oyster farmers became climate sentinels in 2007 when ocean acidification killed their larvae. Discover urchin divers using rock climbing techniques underwater in 50 pounds of lead, and how their catch feeds innovative closed-loop aquaculture systems growing seaweed and sea cucumbers. From selective breeding programs creating climate-resilient oysters to kelp forests buffering acidification, this episode reveals how Oregon is building regenerative ocean farming that honors Indigenous stewardship, avoids parachute science, and redefines what sustainable food systems look like. Featuring the Oregon Coastal Mariculture Collaborative's community-led approach to expanding "unfed aquaculture"—oysters and seaweed that grow without any inputs beyond what the ocean provides.

Topics

oyster farmingsustainable proteinaquaculturemaricultureocean farmingcommunity-led developmentkelp forestsoregon coastal mariculture collaborativemarine sciencesustainable seafoodtending the tides podcastmarine ecosystemsoregon coastmarine conservationfisheries managementindigenous stewardshipshellfish farmingkelp restorationpacific northwestimtaclimate resilienceocean scienceregenerative agricultureocean science radioclimate changeecotrustcoastal resilienceocean acidificationunfed aquaculturemolluscan broodstock programintegrated multi-trophic aquaculturecoastal communitiespodcastenvironmental sustainabilityfood securityparachute scienceurchin ranchingocean stewardshipsea cucumbersocean conservationocean healthblue economylocal food systemsseaweed farming