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- Bay Barometer appendix G10-05-2009
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- ... minimum in the source intake water to Virginia and Maryland oyster hatcheries were suspected to have caused oyster larvae mortality at the two hatcheries in 1998 (Luck enbach ...
- Bay Barometer Chapter 5 Chlorophyll a Criteria10-05-2009
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- Nutrient enrichment and changes in important grazer populations such as oysters, menhaden, zooplankton and benthic macroinvertebrates have potentially altered the natural ...
- Ambient Water Quality Criteria for Dissolved Oxygen, Water Clarity and Chlorophyll a for the Chesapeake Bay and Its Tidal Tributaries10-05-2009
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- This use protects many bottom-feeding fish, crabs and oysters, and other important species such as the bay anchovy... menhaden and bay anchovy, and with bottomdwelling invertebrates such as oysters, clams and worms.
- No title08-04-2003
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- Loss of Habitat Historically, habitat provided by oyster bars, underwater bay grasses, wetlands and forests enabled the Chesapeake ... Oyster harvests in the Chesapeake Bay have declined due to overharvesting, disease, pollution and loss of oyster reef habitat ...
- Attachment 1 Chesapeake 2000 Agreement10-05-2009
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- Oysters â By 2010, achieve, at a minimum, a tenfold increase in native oysters in the Chesapeake Bay, based upon a 1994 baseline ...
- Chesapeake 2000 Commitments10-05-2009
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- ... 2010, achieve, at a minimum, a tenfold increase in native oysters in the Chesapeake Bay, based upon a 1994 1.1.1.1 baseline.
- Bay Barometer Executive Summary10-05-2009
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- This use protects many bottom-feeding fish, crabs and oysters, and other important species such as the bay anchovy... menhaden and bay anchovy, and with bottomdwelling invertebrates such as oysters, clams and worms.
- No title08-07-2003
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- ... and sediment pollution on the Bayâs aquatic living resourceâfish, crabs, oysters, their prey species and underwater bay grasses.
- No title08-04-2003
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- ... pre-settlement presence of vast underwater grass beds and intertidal oyster bar breakwaters... processes involved the vast extent of filter feeders, such as oysters, that consumed water-borne nutrients.
- Chesapeake Bay Program Office10-08-2009
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- ... nutrient and sediment pollution on the Bay's aquatic living resources-fish, crabs, oysters, their prey species and underwater bay grasses.
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