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You Won't Believe How South Researchers Are Toughening Up Oysters


Posted on January 13, 2026
Marketing and Communications


Building a reef near Dauphin Island, Alabama, helped Dr. Lee Smee, second from left, and others how to boost oyster survival.  data-lightbox='featured'
Building a reef near Dauphin Island, Alabama, helped Dr. Lee Smee, second from left, and others how to boost oyster survival.

This story was published in the fall 2025 edition of , a publication of the 91视频 and the USA National Alumni Association. 

With the best of intentions, Dr. Lee Smee and other coastal Alabama researchers are deliberately terrifying baby oysters. With the tiny oysters happily settled and starting to grow, the researchers put a red-alert danger signal in the water: urine 鈥 from specific fish, crabs and snails that love to feast on oysters.

The oysters defend themselves the only way they can. They harden their shells to fend off the predators and grow big enough to get eaten by humans.

It works. Survival rates increase by up to 70%. That could have a big impact, Smee says. 鈥淭his is a species that spawns in the millions and millions.鈥

Smee is a professor of marine and environmental sciences at South and a marine scientist at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab. He鈥檚 partnered with scientists, graduate students, undergraduate interns, oyster farmers and even Scout troops, at South and elsewhere, to test some it鈥檚-not-crazy-if-it-works ideas to reverse the decline of oysters in Gulf waters.

He and his colleagues have attached urinary catheters to fish. They have extracted urine from crabs using tiny hypodermic needles and steady hands. Soon, with help from chemists at Georgia Tech, they hope to be able to synthesize what Smee calls 鈥渟cary juice鈥 鈥 a mass-producible chemical containing the components in urine that signal, 鈥淧redator!鈥

That could be a powerful new tool for restoring reefs and boosting declining harvests in the Gulf and beyond.

All those people are going to all that trouble because the humble oyster, a filter-feeding mollusk with gills, a heart, a nervous system and no brain, is a foundation species and ecosystem engineer providing critical habitat for the Gulf Coast. Says Smee, 鈥淥ysters, I would argue, might be the most important species in the whole Gulf.鈥

And they鈥檙e in trouble.

鈥淥yster reefs are probably the most degraded habitat in the world,鈥 says Smee. 鈥淪omewhere around 85 to 90% of them globally are gone. And that鈥檚 certainly true here in the northern Gulf.鈥 

Dr. Lee Smee

Audio Transcript:

Dr. Lee Smee: Oysters are, like, I would argue, might be the most important species in the whole Gulf. They do a ton of really good, important services for us. I mean, they're delicious. They're a commercial and a recreational fishery, and so they're big business here. Think about all the oyster festivals and the oyster artwork. They're part of the culture of the area. And then you figure there's these ecological benefits. So they filter the water and they remove, you know, nitrogen and harmful things, so they clean our water. They help with nutrient cycling. You know, they build a habitat for themselves, but for other things like red drum and blue crabs. Maybe their most valuable benefit is they harden the shoreline, so they protect the marsh. When someone says, 鈥淗ow do we make the marsh better?鈥 The answer is oysters.

Oysters clean the water, filtering out algae, sediment, nitrogen and other pollutants. Growing willy-nilly on top of each other, they build reefs that provide habitats for other species we love to eat, such as red drum and blue crabs. Reefs also protect shorelines, salt marshes and beach houses against erosion and storm surges.

And, of course, oysters taste delicious. Almost half of the country鈥檚 $250 million oyster industry is based on the Gulf Coast. Oyster farming produces more than $3 million worth of oysters each year in Alabama alone, making the state one of the largest processors of oysters. Oyster festivals and seafood restaurants boost local economies, last year helping Alabama鈥檚 beach counties, Baldwin and Mobile, to draw 9.7 million tourists.

Oyster near Dauphin Island
oyster drill resting on an oyster
urine being extracted from a crab
Dr. Lee Smee works with a simulated ecosystem tank for oyster experiments
Clockwise from top left, measuring the size of oysters in the field, nabbing an oyster drill (green shell), the most significant oyster predator in Alabama, Dr. Lee Smee at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab's mesocosm (simulated ecosystem) tanks, extracting urine from a blue crab. 


Even if you hate their taste and never eat fish or seafood, you probably depend on oysters for part of your diet. Chicken eggshells are mostly calcium carbonate 鈥 the same gritty material that makes up most of an oyster shell. Chickens eat crushed oyster shells to provide the extra calcium they need to keep up their rigorous egg-laying schedules.

A single oyster species populates the entire Atlantic and Gulf coasts of North and South America from Canada to Argentina: the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica.

One female can produce 100 million eggs each breeding season. Each male releases many millions more sperm. Multimillions of offspring result. At first, they resemble tiny clams. Nearly all die or get eaten before they become large enough for humans even to notice them.

After a couple of weeks, when they鈥檙e not much bigger than a grain of sand, oyster larvae look for a home. Like house-hunting humans, the swimming larvae obsess about location, location, location. Mud or sand won鈥檛 do. They need a hard surface. Once they find one, Smee says, 鈥渢hey鈥檒l decide if they like that place or not. If they don鈥檛 like it, they鈥檒l just lift off and drift away.鈥

When they find the right surface, the right water salinity and whatever else oysters want for their dream house location, they glue themselves to the place they鈥檒l remain for the rest of their lives.

Spat (the term for oysters after they settle down) grow fast. Stationary targets for predators, they build their shells quickly by drawing minerals from the water. Blue crabs break open the shells. Oyster drills 鈥 snails an inch or two long 鈥 pry open the shells or scrape holes and suck out the meat. Sheepshead fish crush the shells.

When a wolf howls in the middle of the night, humans sacrifice their sleep to guard their livestock. Oysters can鈥檛 hear, but they can sense chemicals in the water. Smee and his colleagues guessed correctly that predator urine might work as a kind of chemical howl, stimulating a young oyster to expend extra energy on strengthening its shell at the expense of fast growth.

In tanks at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab, they exposed oysters to urine from crabs, drills and sheepshead, as well as chemicals released by oysters being crushed. They tried the substances singly and in combinations.

The oysters did indeed harden their shells, by varying amounts depending on the threat chemical. Did that actually help? To find out, the researchers transplanted the oysters to a test reef they鈥檇 built near Lightning Point in Bayou La Batre, Alabama, southwest of Mobile.

鈥淎fter a year,鈥 Smee says, 鈥渟urvivorship was up to 70% higher.鈥 For a species that reproduces in the millions with minuscule survival rates, every percentage point helps. That drives Smee to continue his research.

鈥淚f you increase survival 1 or 2%, that鈥檚 potentially thousands of oysters,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd the difference between a reef that makes it and one that doesn鈥檛 is often a couple hundred to a few thousand individuals. So I think it could be super important.鈥


The Gulf鈥檚 Oyster Think Tank

South Alabama ranks among the top universities in the country for the study of oyster biology, ecology and fisheries. Five USA faculty members 鈥 Drs. Sean Powers, Ronald Baker, Ruth Carmichael, Steven Scyphers and Lee Smee 鈥 conduct research on topics including:

  • Restoring wild fisheries for oysters and understanding the role of oyster reefs as habitat for finfish and crabs.
  • Identifying contamination sources and water quality impairment and mitigating their negative impact on oyster reefs and oyster fisheries.
  • Using nearshore oysters as natural breakwaters (living shorelines)
    to mitigate coastal erosion.

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