Mysterious epidemic devastates starfish population off the Pacific Coast
Up
and down the Pacific Coast, starfish are dying by the tens of
thousands and no one knows why. Special correspondent Katie Campbell
reports from Seattle on how researchers and citizen scientists are
investigating the spread of the mysterious and distressing syndrome
NOAA-led researchers discover ocean acidity is dissolving shells of tiny snails off the U.S. West Coast
,
April
30, 2014
A NOAA-led research team has found the first evidence that acidity of continental shelf waters off the West Coast is dissolving the shells of tiny free-swimming marine snails, called pteropods, which provide food for pink salmon, mackerel and herring, according to a new paper published inProceedings of the Royal Society B.
Researchers
estimate that the percentage of pteropods in this region with
dissolving shells due to ocean acidification has doubled in the
nearshore habitat since the pre-industrial era and is on track to
triple by 2050 when coastal waters become 70 percent more corrosive
than in the pre-industrial era due to human-caused ocean
acidification.
The
new research documents the movement of corrosive waters onto the
continental shelf from April to September during the upwelling
season, when winds bring water rich in carbon dioxide up from depths
of about 400-600 feet to the surface and onto the continental shelf.
The
term “ocean acidification” describes the process of ocean water
becoming corrosive as a result of absorbing nearly a third of the
carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere from human sources. This
change in ocean chemistry is affecting marine life, particularly
organisms with calcium carbonate skeletons or shells, such as corals,
oysters, mussels, and small creatures in the early stages of the food
chain such as pteropods. The pteropod is a free-swimming snail found
in oceans around the world that grows to a size of about one-eighth
to one-half inch.
“We did not expect to see pteropods being affected to this extent in our coastal region for several decades,” said William Peterson, Ph.D., an oceanographer at NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center and one of the paper’s co-authors. “This study will help us as we compare these results with future observations to analyze how the chemical and physical processes of ocean acidification are affecting marine organisms.”
Richard
Feely, senior scientist from NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental
Lab and co-author of the research article, said that more research is
needed to study how corrosive waters may be affecting other species
in the ecosystem. "We do know that organisms like oyster larvae
and pteropods are affected by water enriched with carbon dioxide. The
impacts on other species, such as other shellfish and larval or
juvenile fish that have economic significance, are not yet fully
understood."
The research drew upon a West Coast survey by the NOAA Ocean Acidification Program in August 2011, that was conducted onboard the R/V Wecoma, owned by the National Science Foundation and operated by Oregon State University.
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