You might remember
this kernel of wisdom from a few years back.
BP representative Hugh Depland said that while the company wasn’t sure
exactly when more workers would be hired, the $239 billion company was
spending “a lot of money, time and effort to bring this event to a
close.” And to those worried restaurateurs facing rising prices for
shrimp and oysters? In the words of fellow BP rep Randy Prescott:
“Louisiana isn’t the only place that has shrimp.”
He's right. It isn't the only place.
But we're crossing the other places off the list too.
In 2012, the most recent year for which data
is available, nearly 5.8 million pounds of fish were commercially
harvested from Galveston Bay, at a combined wholesale value of $16.4
million.
More than one-10th of that income comes from shrimp, which
are among the most vulnerable species to the oil spill, in part because
the brown shrimp’s spawning season is already underway, beginning in
earnest near the end of March. The spawning happens in the Gulf of
Mexico, but soon afterward the new shrimp larvae will spend days, if not
weeks, drifting in the water toward the bay and shoreline marshes.
That’s where they will metamorphose into baby shrimp, eventually
maturing into adults and returning to the Gulf after several months.
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