This article is from 2012
An article in Nature magazine in 2010 noted that the arrival of Humboldt squid is considered a sign “of a system in trouble.”
An article in Nature magazine in 2010 noted that the arrival of Humboldt squid is considered a sign “of a system in trouble.”
Hundreds Of Squid Wash Ashore Along Santa Cruz County Beaches
Scientists are investigating why at least several hundred dead squid suddenly washed ashore along the Santa Cruz County coast Sunday afternoon.
CBS,
10
Deecember, 2012
Witnesses
said the Humboldt squid stranded themselves during high tide Sunday.
Carcasses were found along a 12 mile stretch from Aptos to
Watsonville.
“You
just see them essentially killing themselves, and it’s just really
weird to see it,” said graduate student Hannah Rosen of Stanford
University’s Hopkins Marine Station
Rosen
said some people tried to put the squid back in the water, but the
deepwater creatures swam back to shore.
“They
don’t see the shore very often,” Rosen said “So it might just
be that they don’t understand what’s going on around them, and
they’re just trying to get away and don’t realize that if they
swim towards the shore, they’re going to run out of water
eventually.”
Scientists
identified the squid as juveniles, both male and female, about a foot
and a half long, weighing three pounds. The animals had full
stomachs, having feasted on smaller market squid. A few had also
cannibalized each other, which is normal.
Researchers
have not determined why the squid washed ashore. There is some
speculation the animals may have eaten toxic algae.
“It’s
possible that the squid are ingesting either these neurotoxins or
they’re getting it through their food,” Rosen said. “And that
could be causing them to be disoriented and swim onto the beach.”
Humboldt
squid have not been seen in the Monterey Bay area for a few years.
Scientists believe El Nino weather patterns may have drawn them to
the cooler waters of Northern and Central California. The stranding
is the third in the past six weeks.
“It’s
really an exploratory time for us, so we’re learning more about
what causes these strandings, and whether or not we should be worried
about them or if it’s just a natural part of the squid cycle,”
Rosen said.
Threat of 'dead zone' developing off Sonoma Coast
5
December, 2013
Climate
change is the likely cause of unprecedented mass of oxygen-poor water
off the Sonoma Coast, a phenomenon that could harm the region's
prized Dungeness crab and other marine life.
Scientists
at the Bodega Marine Laboratory, who were the first to detect the
hypoxic (low-oxygen) waters, aren't calling it a “dead zone” yet,
despite the similarity to a lethal condition along the Oregon coast
for the past 12 years and forecasts that it will occur worldwide with
global warming.
“There's
nothing dead,” said John Largier, an oceanographer at the UC Davis
research facility on Bodega Head. But equipment on a bright yellow
buoy anchored about a mile offshore has recorded dissolved oxygen
levels low enough to cause “significant distress” for some marine
organisms, he said.
Oxygen-poor
water is common in deep water of the open ocean, but until this year
had never been documented over the continental shelf close to the
Sonoma coast, he said.
In
Oregon, near-shore hypoxia was discovered in 2002 and has occurred
every year since, punctuated by sporadic die-offs of crab and other
bottom-dwelling species, including anemones, starfish and sea
cucumbers.
Masses
of dead crabs washed onto a rocky beach near the town of Yachats on
the central Oregon coast in 2004, and a 2006 event in the same area —
in which dissolved oxygen approached zero — devastated life on the
seafloor.
Low-oxygen
episodes in Oregon are “here to stay,” said Francis Chan, a
marine ecologist at Oregon State University, where scientists are
tracking hypoxia with small undersea craft called gliders that
operate on their own for weeks at a time.
The
range and intensity of Oregon's dead zones varies from year to year,
but they are concentrated in a 50-mile stretch of the central Coast
from Florence to Newport, Chan said.
A
comparable stretch of the Sonoma Coast would run from Bodega Bay to
Gualala. Low-oxygen water has been measured on the seabottom about
100 feet below the marine lab buoy and within 10 feet of the surface,
Largier said.
He
doesn't know how widely it extends, but suspects it reaches all along
the Sonoma and Mendocino coasts.
Dissolved
oxygen readings from the buoy go as low as 2 milligrams per liter,
the definition of hypoxia and one-fourth of a normal oxygen level.
Chan
and his colleagues thought it was “only a matter of time” before
dead zone conditions were detected in Northern California.
Oregon's
hypoxia was first reported in 2002 by crab fishermen, who found up to
75 percent of their catch in crab pots was coming up dead. Checking
oceanographic records, Oregon scientists found that oxygen levels in
the open ocean had been trending downward for five decades, a likely
precursor to the advent of nearshore hypoxia.
Dead
zones like Oregon's also have been reported in Washington state, as
well as Peru and Chile in South America and Namibia and South Africa.
No
one has documented the number of crabs killed during Oregon's hypoxic
events, which typically begin in mid- to late summer and last for one
to six weeks, Chan said.
Oregon's
Dungeness crab catch, worth an average of $30 million a year over the
past decade, fluctuates dramatically from year to year.
About
six of Oregon's best crab seasons have occurred since the dead zone
was discovered in 2002, but it's possible they would have been better
with no hypoxia, said Troy Buell of the Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife.
The
crab season is winding down by the time low-oxygen conditions appear,
Chan said, adding that crab die-offs are infrequent and localized.
Crab
loss so far “isn't big enough to have an imprint on the
population,” he said.
Still,
scientists are concerned about the future impacts of west coast
hypoxia, generally regarded as a symptom of climate change.
California's
commercial Dungeness crab catch also fluctuates, with a record $95
million haul — the price paid for 31.7 million pounds of crabs in
2011-12 — far exceeding the 10-year average of $40 million.
“Deoxygeneration
of the ocean will have potentially serious consequences,” said a
study last year by four Oregon State scientists titled “Declining
Oxygen in the Northeast Pacific.”
Chan,
Largier and Tessa Hill, another Bodega Marine Lab faculty member, are
members of a panel of 22 scientists convened last month at Stanford
University with the goal of interpreting research on hypoxia and
ocean acidification for public policymakers.
Largier
said he is “fairly confident” that west coast hypoxia is a
consequence of climate change, but the presumed connection is
complex.
It's
a two-fold process in which warming ocean surface water absorbs less
oxygen and also curtails a natural mixing action that drives
dissolved oxygen into deeper waters.
At
the same time, the coastal upwelling brings nutrient-rich water
toward the surface, where it fosters an abundance of marine life but
is also low on oxygen.
The
net result is a plummeting level of dissolved oxygen that stresses
marine organisms similar to the way a human struggles to breathe
enough oxygen at high altitudes.
The
vast majority of more than 400 dead zones documented around the world
in a 2008 report are of a entirely different nature, created by
fertilizer-laden runoff from rivers and burning of fossil fuels.
The
largest dead zone in the nation is in the Gulf Of Mexico, where the
Mississippi River discharges nutrients from the nation's agricultural
heartland, creating a hypoxic zone that swells as large as the state
of New Jersey.
Largier
discounted that factor on the North Coast, saying the neither the
Russian River nor San Francisco Bay contribute to nearshore hypoxia.
But
if climate change truly is the trigger, dead zones are likely to
occur wherever there is an ocean upwelling, experts say.
In
retrospect, Largier said, the arrival of giant Humboldt squid in
local waters — where party boat anglers began hauling them in by
the droves in 2005, according to news reports — should have been a
warning.
The
large squid, which inhabited deep, oxygen-poor waters off the South
American coast, may have moved north as the oxygen levels declined,
Largier said.
An
article in Nature magazine in 2010 noted that the arrival of Humboldt
squid is considered a sign “of a system in trouble.”
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