Cathy Crawford/Getty Images
A live oyster
The Urban Assembly New York Harbor School sits on Governors Island, a tiny island south of Manhattan, in New York City. Students at this public high school do what most students do: read novels, practice math, and learn about history. But they also have some unusual classes. These classes involve diving underwater, driving boats, and growing oysters, soft-bodied creatures that live inside shells.
Oysters live along coastlines around the world. The mollusks grow on top of each other, forming jagged structures called oyster reefs. These reefs were once common in the waters surrounding New York City. But now they have all but disappeared.
The students at the Harbor School are trying to change that. They’re working with an organization called the Billion Oyster Project (BOP) to reintroduce 1 billion oysters to the city’s coastlines by 2035. The oysters could help clean the water, increase biodiversity, and protect shorelines against storms.
“I never thought something so small could have such a big impact,” says Quincy Lonnie Maloney, an 18-year-old student at the school.
The Urban Assembly New York Harbor School sits on Governors Island. It’s a tiny island south of Manhattan in New York City. Students at the public high school do what most students do. They read books, practice math, and learn about history. But they also have some unusual classes. These classes involve diving underwater and driving boats. They also involve growing oysters. These soft-bodied animals live inside shells.
Oysters are mollusks. They live along coastlines all over the world. They grow on top of each other. They form structures called oyster reefs. There were once many oyster reefs in New York City waters. But nearly all of them are gone now.
The students at the Harbor School want that to change. They’re working with a group called the Billion Oyster Project (BOP). It plans to add 1 billion oysters to the city’s coastlines. The group aims to do this by 2035. The oysters could help clean the water. They’d also boost biodiversity. And they’d help protect shores from storms.
“I never thought something so small could have such a big impact,” says Quincy Lonnie Maloney. He’s an 18-years-old a student at the school.