From
Kevin Hester who has sailed the Pacific for years -
Photo
plankton and krill are the bottom of the ocean food web.
Their
decline is the canary in the coal mine of a dying ocean. ""Our
guys in Santa Barbara are saying there's almost nothing down there.
Just a lot of warm, clear water, a little bit of salmon and not much
else," said Zeke Grader.
In
16 Ocean passages I have watched the sea life die away. I believe it
is related to a combination of events. Hypoxia, acidification due to
anthropogenic climate change, over-fishing and the 300 tons of
radioactive water cascading into the Pacific Ocean from Fukushima
Daiichi won't be helping.
Either
way we bear witness to the death of our oceans.
2
November, 2014
Hawaiian
ono swimming off the California coast? Giant sunfish in Alaska? A sea
turtle usually at home off the Galapagos Islands floating near San
Francisco?
Rare
changes in wind patterns this fall have caused the Pacific Ocean off
California and the West Coast to warm to historic levels, drawing in
a bizarre menagerie of warm-water species. The mysterious phenomena
are surprising fishermen and giving marine biologists an aquatic
Christmas in November.
Temperatures
off the California coast are currently 5 to 6 degrees Fahrenheit
warmer than historic averages for this time of year -- among the
warmest autumn conditions of any time in the past 30 years.
Blue
Buoy Barnacle (Dosima fascicularis): This barnacle with a bright blue
stalk produces its own float and spends its entire life drifting at
sea. This species is commonly associated with warm water and was
found washed ashore in Bodega Bay, Calif., in August and September
2014. Photo by Jackie Sones/UC Davis ( Photo by Jackie Sones/UC Davis
)
"It's
not bathtub temperature," said Nate Mantua, a research scientist
with the National Marine Fisheries Service in Santa Cruz, "but
it is swimmable on a sunny day."
In
mid-October, it was 65 degrees off the Farallon Islands and in
Monterey Bay, and 69 degrees off Point Conception near Santa Barbara.
In most years, water temperatures in those areas would be in the high
50s or low 60s.
The
last time the ocean off California was this warm was in 1983 and
1997, both strong El Niño years that brought drenching winter rains
to the West Coast.
But
El Niño isn't driving this year's warm-water spike, which began in
mid-July, experts say. Nor is climate change.
What's
happening is winds that normally blow from the north, trapping warm
water closer to the equator, have slackened since the summer. That's
allowed the warm water to move north.
In
most years, the winds also help push ocean surface waters, churning
up cold water from down below. That process, called upwelling, isn't
happening as much this year.
"If
the wind doesn't blow, there's no cooling of the water," Mantua
said. "It's like the refrigerator fails. The local water warms
up from the sun, and is not cooling off."
Mantua
said researchers don't know why the winds slacked off -- or when they
will start again.
"It's
a mystery," he said.
All
year, scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration have been forecasting an El Niño, conditions in which
warm ocean water at the equator near South America can affect the
weather in dramatic ways. But now the water is only slightly warmer
than normal at the equator, leading scientists to declare a mild El
Niño is on the way. And although strong El Niños often have brought
wet winters to California, mild ones have just as often resulted in
moderate or dry winters.
For
people who study the ocean, this fall has been a wonderland.
"It's
fascinating," said Eric Sanford, a marine biology professor at
the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory in Bodega Bay. "To see so
many southern species in a single year is really a rare event."
Sanford,
colleague Jackie Sones and other researchers at the Bodega lab, along
with scientists at Point Blue Conservation Science, a nonprofit group
in Petaluma, have documented more than 100 common dolphins off the
Farallon Islands in the past two months. They're normally seen
hundreds of miles away, off Southern California.
The
scientists have scooped up a tiny species of ocean snail called the
tropical sea butterfly, normally found far to the south. They have
documented a Guadalupe fur seal, normally found off Baja California
in Mexico; blue buoy barnacles and purple-striped jellyfish, which
usually drift off Southern California; and a Guadalupe murrelet, a
tiny seabird that frequents Mexico.
Pacific
green sea turtle caught near the Golden Gate, on Sept. 6, 2014.
(Photo courtesy the Salty Lady)
In
September, a fisherman off San Francisco caught an endangered green
sea turtle, an extremely rare find for Northern California, since the
species usually lives off Mexico and the Galapagos Islands. He
returned it to the sea unharmed.
Similar
tales are turning up in Southern California, where fishermen and
scientists have found Hawaiian ono, along with tripletail, a fish
species commonly found between Costa Rica and Peru, and other
warm-water species.
In
August and September there were even sightings of skipjack tuna and
giant sunfish, or mola mola, off Alaska.
"They
are following the water temperature," said H.J. Walker, a senior
museum scientist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San
Diego. "Fish come up against a cold-water barrier normally and
turn around. But now they aren't encountering that, so they are
swimming farther north."
Over
the past week, the water temperature at the Scripps pier in La Jolla
was 71 degrees. The historic average back to 1916 for late October is
65 degrees.
In
many parts of California, the commercial salmon catch was down, and
squid were caught as far north as Eureka, which is unusual.
"Our
guys in Santa Barbara are saying there's almost nothing down there.
Just a lot of warm, clear water, a little bit of salmon and not much
else," said Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific
Federation of Fishermen's Associations in San Francisco.
The
ocean changes also have affected birds. As ocean upwelling stalled in
the summer, less krill and other food rose from the depths. As a
result, several species of birds, including common murres, had high
rates of egg failure on the Farallon Islands, 27 miles west of San
Francisco.
"The
krill that is usually present disappeared, and the fish that some of
these birds rely on disappeared," said Jaime Jahncke, California
Current Group director of Point Blue in Petaluma.
"Up
until July we had an abundance of whales around the Farallons, mostly
humpback whales, and some blue whales. And when we went back in
September, there was no krill and the whales were nearly absent."
More
common local species are expected to return when waters cool, as they
did after the 1983 and 1997 warmings.
"It
is an oddball year. But I'm not surprised," said Joe Welsh,
associate curator of collecting for the Monterey Bay Aquarium. "These
things come and go. There's a lot to learn out there."
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