Temperatures
lead to what appears to be largest local die-off in 15 years, raising fears for
broader ecosystem
Susie Cagle in
San Francisco
Sat 29
Jun 2019 06.00 BSTLast modified on Mon 1 Jul 2019 13.18 BST
In all
her years working at Bodega Bay, the marine reserve research coordinator Jackie Sones had
never seen anything like it: scores of dead mussels on the rocks, their shells
gaping and scorched, their meats thoroughly cooked.
A
record-breaking June heatwave apparently caused the largest die-off of mussels
in at least 15 years at Bodega Head, a small headland on the northern California bay.
And Sones received reports from other researchers of similar mass mussel deaths
at various beaches across roughly 140 miles (225km) of coastline.
While the
people who flocked to the Pacific to enjoy a rare 80F (27C) beach day soaked up
the sun, so did the mussel beds – where the rock-bound mollusks could have been
experiencing temperatures above 100F at low tide, literally roasting in their
shells.
Sones
expects the die-off to affect the rest of the seashore ecosystem. “Mussels are
known as a foundation species. The equivalent are the trees in a forest – they
provide shelter and habitat for a lot of animals, so when you impact that core
habitat it ripples throughout the rest of the system,” said Sones.
“I would
expect that this actually impacted the entire region, it’s just that you would
have to have people out there to document it to know,” said Sones.
Years of
research into ocean health has focused on rising water temperatures and the
effects of acidification on marine life. Kelp and coral are suffering in warmer
waters, starfish are melting, and shellfish are breaking down.
But there
is less data on the impacts of these kinds of one-off extreme weather events in
the open coastal air. The Northeastern University marine ecologist Brian
Helmuth designed a robot mussel that can measure and log temperatures as the
animal would experience them.
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