Couverture de Good News Today — 100 Million Clams, Drone Drops & a Lagoon Fighting Back

Good News Today — 100 Million Clams, Drone Drops & a Lagoon Fighting Back

Good News Today — 100 Million Clams, Drone Drops & a Lagoon Fighting Back

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Florida's Indian River Lagoon once lost ninety-nine percent of its native clam population to overharvesting, storms, and declining water quality. This week, the Billion Clam Initiative hit a landmark: 100 million clams restored, with 3.5 million dropped in a single drone-assisted operation. It's one of the most striking examples of nature-based restoration scaling up through modern technology — and it's working. Clams planted five or six years ago are now spawning independently, and water quality in restored areas is measurably improving.

A single adult clam filters up to twenty-five gallons of water per day. Multiply that across a lagoon, and you have a biological water treatment system running entirely for free. Drone deployment has made it possible to scatter clams with a precision and scale that boats and manual release simply couldn't match.

Also this episode: New York State and the Finger Lakes Land Trust have permanently protected thirty-three acres in the Six Mile Creek and Cayuga Lake watersheds — the direct drinking water source for Ithaca and Cornell University. And on World Ocean Day, volunteers at Rockaway Beach joined a shoreline cleanup organised with the Laru Beya Collective, pulling debris and showing up for the unglamorous work that keeps coastlines healthy.

The through-line: nature-based solutions work when they're resourced and given time. One hundred million clams is a milestone. One billion is the goal — and right now, it looks like a plan in motion, not a fantasy.

A YesWee production, built using AI technology.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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