Earth News from TerraDaily.com
Belgium stashes sunken ship with rare oysters in marine life boost
Ostend, Belgium, July 20 (AFP) Jul 20, 2025
A cargo ship lying at the bottom of the sea off the Belgian coast has been fitted with a new treasure chest: a stash of rare flat oysters.

The mollusc has mostly disappeared from the North Sea due to human activity including overfishing.

Now, a Belgian project is trying to reintroduce it in a move scientists believe will help boost other marine species.

"We have to bring them back because they are essential elements in our marine ecosystems," Vicky Stratigaki, an engineer working on the restoration project, told AFP.

In mid-July, a load of 200,000 oyster larvae attached to biodegradable materials was deposited 30 metres under the sea in the ship's hull.

The environmental project, named "Belreefs", aims to turn the wreckage into a biodiversity sanctuary.

Flat oysters form reefs that purify water and that other sea animals, from fish to algae, use as breeding and feeding grounds, explained Stratigaki.

"There is a lot of predation in the sea, it's a wild environment," she said, with about 30,000 of the oyster larvae expected to survive their first year at sea.

"Then they will start reproducing, extending the reef and also supporting the biodiversity of the reef."

The laying of the oyster stash is the culmination of two years' work for the Belgian government project, which is supported by European Union funding.

"Until around the 1850s, the North Sea and the European waters were full of these oyster reefs," Stratigaki explained.

Then overfishing, the spreading of an imported parasite called Bonamia and "climatic adverse effects" caused them to disappear, she said.

The 1906 wreckage, located about 30 kilometres off the coastal city of Ostend, was selected to house the pilot as fishing and other disruptive activities are banned around it.

"In Belgium every wreck that is for more than one hundred years on the sea bottom gets protected automatically as cultural heritage, because it's nice for divers to go there," said Merel Oeyen, a marine environment expert at the Belgian ministry of health.

"It's also a hot spot for biodiversity".





Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Flexible Payload Interface for Spacecraft
Boeing looks for Starliner fixes despite costs, ISS age
SpaceX sends Starlink satellites to polar orbit in late night launch

24/7 Energy News Coverage
Swatch profits plunge on weak China sales
Zuckerberg settles lawsuit over Cambridge Analytica scandal
Leaking pipes as climate warms: Bulgaria faces water crisis

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Syrian troops move into Suwayda as violence continues
32 killed near Gaza aid sites, Hamas-run Health Ministry says
Ukraine's Zelensky seeks cease-fire meeting next week

24/7 News Coverage
New deep sea mining rules lack consensus despite US pressure
Lightning strikes kill 33 people in eastern India
From Antarctica to Brussels, hunting climate clues in old ice


ADVERTISEMENT



All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.