This
summer I had my first dive for 3 yrs due to an arm injury and was
shocked how quickly the ocean around my house on Rakino Island has
degraded. We dived on a scallop bed I have survived on for 12 years
and didn't get a meal. Three divers were in the water for 60 mins and
we saw 1 crayfish/ lobster where in the past we would see dozens of
all sizes.
On last year's NZ speaking tour of NZ with Professor Guy McPherson I spoke about how in 25 years of sailing I have watched our oceans die.
On last year's NZ speaking tour of NZ with Professor Guy McPherson I spoke about how in 25 years of sailing I have watched our oceans die.
What's
New
"We're
not talking about a few dead fish littering your local beach. Mass
die-offs are individual events that kill at least a billion animals,
wipe out over 90 percent of a population, or destroy 700 million
tons—the equivalent weight of roughly 1,900 Empire State
Buildings—worth of animals."
This
is an obvious extinction event. No osterich that ever put it's head
in the sand survived, nor will we. At least we could face up to our
fate if we were told the truth.
Mass
Animal Die-Offs Are on the Rise, Killing Billions and
Raising Questions
Huge
animal die-offs, along with disease outbreaks and other population
stressors, are happening more often
13
January, 2015
We're
not talking about a few dead fish littering your local beach. Mass
die-offs are individual events that kill at least a billion animals,
wipe out over 90 percent of a population, or destroy 700 million
tons—the equivalent weight of roughly 1,900 Empire State
Buildings—worth of animals.
And
according to new research, such die-offs are on the rise.
The
study, published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, is the first to examine whether mass die-offs have
increased over time.
Researchers
reviewed historical records of 727 mass die-offs from 1940 to 2012
and found that over that time, these events have become more common
for birds, marine invertebrates, and fish. The numbers remained
unchanged for mammals and decreased for amphibians and reptiles. (See
"What's Killing Bottlenose Dolphins? Experts Discover Cause.")
Disease,
human-caused disturbances, and biotoxins—like the red tides caused
by algae that are prevalent along American coastlines—are three
major culprits.
Why
It Matters
Big
die-offs can permanently change food webs. Ninety-nine percent of the
sea urchin Diadema antillarum disappeared from the Caribbean in 1983
thanks to a pathogen. The herbivore's vanishing act paved the way for
an algal invasion of reefs, smothering corals.
Massive
die-offs can also endanger human activities like farming by
disrupting insects that pollinate plants, like bees.
"Such
events can reshape the ecological and evolutionary trajectories of
life on Earth," the study authors write. (See "Why Are
Millions of Starfish 'Melting'?")
The
Big Picture
It's
unclear what's making diseases more common or why red tides happen
more often. Climate change and environmental degradation are some
contenders.
Researchers
also don't know why die-off rates differ between animal groups. The
scientists may have missed some die-off events, giving the impression
of steady or declining rates in mammals, amphibians, and reptiles.
Or, these groups may not be as affected as fish, birds, and marine
invertebrates.
What's
Next
What's
clear is that lack of coordinated attention from scientists is a
problem, the study authors say. In fact, "at this time, the vast
majority of [mass die-offs] are presented in newspapers," they
write.
There
needs to be better monitoring of these events, they say, since that's
the only way we'll know how much trouble life on Earth is in.
Jeremy
Jackson: Ocean Apocalypse
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