Workers shucking oysters at P&J Oyster Company in New Orleans, May 2010. John Moore / Getty Images

By KIM SEVERSON
June 10, 2010, 12:56 pm The oldest oyster-shucking operation in the country shucked its last oyster on Thursday, a victim of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Al Sunseri, whose family has run P&J Oyster Company since 1876, said he was about to give the news  to the workers at their oyster house in the French Quarter of New Orleans. “All the people I buy from are unable to work their grounds,” he said. “Unless they open some areas,  we’re done.” The majority of the oyster beds that supplied the company have been shut down. And the beds that are open have been getting flushed with fresh water from the Mississippi River. In an effort to hold back the oil, the authorities have been opening inland water diversion gates to push the oil back. As a result, oysters are dying because they don’t have the right mix of salt and fresh water. And it is happening in the middle of spawning season, killing baby oysters. It takes 18 months to two years for an oyster to grow to size. So missing an entire spawning season will have a great impact on Louisiana oysters for years to come. … “We were just hopeful they would have capped that thing by now,” he said.

Oil Spill Shuts the Nation’s Oldest Oyster-Shucking Company