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With a rake in one hand and a cooler bag in the other, I climbed out of a kayak ready to go clamming for the first time.
Editor's note: This is the first story in a three-part series on the quahog's decline in Rhode Island. WARWICK – David Ghigliotty works his bullrake into the bottom of Narragansett Bay, using ...
Scientists, lawmakers and those who make their living from Rhode Island’s Narragansett Bay are teaming up to hunt for the reason why quahogs appear to be on the decline. On Tuesday, a special ...
PROVIDENCE – The members of a special legislative commission studying the decline of quahog harvests in Narragansett Bay agree on a few things. That a steady supply of nutrients in the water is ...
The Quahog Bay Conservancy plans to transform the former Quahog Bay Inn into a “hub of marine research excellence” and revitalize the property’s working waterfront. Patrick Scanlan, founder ...
The quahog transplant doesn’t come without an incentive. The Narragansett Bay Commission gives the quahoggers $15 for each 50-pound bag of clams.
Canoeing in Maine: Exploring the Yarmouth islands in Quahog Bay From blue herons to bald eagles, birds will put on a show while you paddle between Yarmouth Island and Little Yarmouth Island in ...
Human intervention changed life in Narragansett Bay. But could it save the quahog? Gannett Alex Kuffner, Providence Journal March 13, 2024 at 5:06 AM ...
Scientists, lawmakers, and those who make their living from Rhode Island’s Narragansett Bay are teaming up to hunt for the reason why quahogs appear to be on the decline. Quahogs have a long ...
Quahog transplants could help So if attempting to change nutrient levels is off the table, what else can be done to help quahogs in the Bay?