EDITORIAL

Saving the quahog

Posted 3/21/24

There are few industries as quintessentially tied to the identity of a state as quahogging in Rhode Island.

Over the decades, the industry has ebbed and flowed with changes to regulations, the …

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EDITORIAL

Saving the quahog

Posted

There are few industries as quintessentially tied to the identity of a state as quahogging in Rhode Island.

Over the decades, the industry has ebbed and flowed with changes to regulations, the number of people actively involved in the hunt, and to a changing environmental reality itself. But throughout all the tumult, the time-honored tradition has continued on, regardless of the circumstances.

Troubling signs of lower-than-normal quahog harvests in recent years has, thankfully, prompted a governmental interest in assessing the problem and identifying solutions, with Warwick’s own Rep. Joseph Solomon Jr. co-chairing the legislative committee whose report on the quahog situation is expected to be released soon. This is a good, proactive measure, and we look forward to the recommendations made and the insight of research gathered.

Unfortunately, like most complex problems, there isn’t likely to be any one easy answer.

Quahogs, like all marine life in Narragansett Bay and our surrounding waters, are part of a vibrant and ever-changing aquatic ecosystem; one that, like everywhere else across the globe, is under constant threat from rising temperatures, increased carbon dioxide levels, and environmental pollutants making their way into that delicate ecological balancing act.

All of those factors likely contribute to the decline of the quahogging industry, as does a declining interest in younger people to get into the profession that requires constant hard work, dedication, and the ability to deal with the highs and lows of such a volatile cash crop.

Ironically enough, one of the possible causes being investigated for the decline in quahogs is the very same measure that has led to better quality water in the bay for other purposes and other marine life – the allowable cap of nitrogen-laden discharges from wastewater treatment plants. That action, made in good ecological faith to improve water quality, had its intended effect, but also may very well be capped to a point of stifling the food that quahogs rely on. It will be interesting to see if a partial or strategically timed lift of that cap is considered an option for the quahog problem, or if doing so would do more harm than good.

This weighing of numerous interests, it seems, is going to be the core responsibility of the scientists, politicians, and other various stakeholders who are involved in the process. What decisions will be made, who it will impact, and what effects it will have are all yet to be seen.

One thing is for certain though. Of the relatively few quahoggers who remain, and saddle up each day to hit the open waters of the bay in search for their “black gold,” their hunt will continue. As the beneficiaries of their tireless efforts, we should all be rooting for brighter days ahead for them.

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