Hot Pacific Ocean Runs Bloody — Blob Now Features Record Red Tide
Red
Tide. It’s what happens when massive algae blooms cover vast
regions of ocean.
17
June, 2015
The
biological density of the blooms is so great that they can paint the
waters affected a shade of brown or red. A bloody color indicative of
clouds of dangerous microbes just beneath the surface. And today, a
massive Red Tide — perhaps
the largest ever recorded —
now stretches from California to Alaska along a vast stretch of the
North American West Coast already reeling under the ongoing and
dangerous impact of a massive ocean heating event that researchers
have called ‘The Blob.’
(A
Red Tide can paint the ocean in bloody shades as seen in the image
above. It’s also bad news for many marine species — first due to
production of deadly biotoxins and second due to its ability to rob
ocean waters of oxygen as the bloom dies off and decays. Image
source:Wind’s
Sustainability Blog.)
A
Red Tide has numerous impacts to both marine life and human industry.
Microbes within the tide produce biotoxins that are deadly to marine
species. Domoic acid, PSP and DSP are all toxins that have been
identified during the current Red Tide event. The toxins primarily
affect fish and marine mammals — risking mass fish and dolphin, sea
lion, seal, otter, and whale deaths during widespread blooms. The
toxins concentrate as they move up the food chain, making them most
dangerous to top predators. Primary effects of the most lethal toxins
are convulsions and paralysis. Other toxins cause nausea, cramps and
diarrhea.
Human
beings are also at risk and for this reason crab and shellfish
fisheries all up and down the US West Coast are being closed. Impacts
are so widespread marine ecologists like Vera Trainer, manager of
the Marine
Microbes and Toxins Programs at
the Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, are
calling the event unpredented:
“The fact that we’re seeing multiple toxins at the same time, we’re seeing high levels of domoic acid, and we’re seeing a coastwide bloom — those are indications that this is unprecedented.”
Global
Warming, Hot Blob — Prime Suspects
Scientists
currently suspect extreme Northeastern Pacific Ocean heat led to the
sudden appearance of Red Tide this week — a combination of warm and
nutrient rich waters are well known to be the key ingredients for Red
Tide formation. Ingredients that are increasingly prevalent due to
human fossil fuel burning. Ingredients that are increasingly evident
in the Northeastern Pacific. In short the burning of fossil fuels
both warms the atmosphere and ocean even as it seeds the surface
water with nitrogen. The warm water is a preferred environment for
the microbes that form the Red Tide and the nitrogen — both as a
constant rain from the sky due to fossil fuel emission and as
effluent from streams due to farm runoff — essentially fertilizes
the bloom.
It
is for these reasons that many scientists suspect the
hot Blob of water in the Northeastern Pacific has played a role in
the formation of the current unprecedented Red Tide.
(The
Northeastern Pacific hot Blob now features a dangerous Red Tide —
perhaps the largest and most toxin laden Red Tide ever seen. Image
source: Earth
Nullschool.)
Warming
the world ocean through human carbon emissions is thus a very
dangerous consequence. Now, more and more regions are featuring hot
zones that are increasingly deadly to sea life. This region of the
Northeast Pacific in particular has seen a number of instances of
mass ocean creature death due to impacts associated with warming
waters. The recent Red Tide being the last of a long chain including
a mass starfish die-off, fish kills, bird kills, and marine mammal
deaths and disruption —
including a winter and spring emergence of crowds of starving sea
lion pups along California beaches.
Next
Step — Anoxia, Possible Hydrogen Sulfide Issue
This
particular Red Tide is still in its early stages. It could last for
weeks. But as it reaches its last days, the mass production of
microbial life will rob the ocean surface of the nutrients necessary
to sustain it. As this happens, the microbes will experience a sudden
die-off. The mass of dead microbes will then sink and decay. This
decay will further rob already de-oxygenated waters, particularly off
Washington and Seattle, of still more oxygen. So the final act of
this particular Red Tide will be to make a bad ocean water oxygen
situation in many of the affected regions even worse (in
the worst case potentially setting some zones up for an ugly deep
water hydrogen sulfide production).
Links:
Hat
Tip to Andy in San Diego
https://www.facebook.com/notes/kevin-hester/phytoplankton-and-our-dying-oceans-more-links-in-the-comments-section/10204258928646071
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