Scientists have discovered that specific geometric patterns in oyster reefs boost young oyster survival, offering a blueprint for restoration worldwide. The study, published in Nature, analyzed natural Sydney rock oyster reefs and tested artificial designs in local estuaries. Findings emphasize small protected spaces over complex structures.
Researchers led by Dr. Juan Esquivel-Muelbert at Macquarie University used high-resolution 3D photogrammetry to map the geometry of surviving Sydney rock oyster reefs. Oysters build these reefs from living individuals and accumulated shells, acting as ecosystem engineers. Dr. Esquivel-Muelbert stated, 'Reefs are finely tuned 3D systems. Their shape controls who lives, who dies and how fast the reef grows.' The team created 16 concrete tile designs mimicking natural shapes and deployed them in Brisbane Water, the Hawkesbury River, and Port Hacking near Sydney, monitoring settlement, growth, and survival with and without predator cages. The experiment revealed that designs providing multiple small protected spaces for juvenile oysters performed best, shielding them from predators like fish and crabs, as well as overheating and drying. 'While total surface area is important, juvenile oysters are very small and highly susceptible,' Dr. Esquivel-Muelbert explained. Optimal configurations matched natural reefs for establishment and long-term survival. Professor Melanie Bishop, a senior author, noted that 85% of Australia's oyster reefs have been lost since European settlement due to harvesting, dredging, and shell use in construction. Co-senior author Professor Joshua Madin of the Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology added, 'Nature has already solved the design problem. Our job is to read that blueprint and scale it up.' These insights could guide global restoration of oyster and similar reefs, enhancing habitats and coastal protection. The findings appear in Nature (DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10103-8), with materials provided by Macquarie University.