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by Staff Writers Davis CA (SPX) Jun 07, 2015
In August 2011, scientists at the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory walked into their labs to a strange, disturbing sight: Thousands of purple sea urchins and other marine invertebrates were dead in their tanks, which are fed directly by seawater. Outside, the tea-colored ocean washed up carcasses of red abalone, large sea stars, and football-sized, snail-like chitons. Less conspicuous--but even more heavily impacted as a population--were the millions of purple sea urchins and tiny sea stars that died along a 62-mile stretch of coast in Northern California, according to a UC Davis-led study published in the journal PLOS ONE that documents the die-off. "We might not have known urchins and six-armed sea stars were affected if lab-held animals hadn't died right in front of us," said the study's lead author Laura Jurgens, a graduate student at UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory who earned her doctorate in May.
Long-term consequences The disappearance of these species to the area suggests long-term population and ecosystem consequences, the study said. "We're expecting real ecological changes in how these tide pools operate," Jurgens said. The silver-dollar-sized, six-armed sea star is a key tide-pool predator, and purple sea urchins serve as cleanup crews and recyclers for kelp detritus that washes ashore, processing the kelp into nutrients. Purple sea urchins also provide food for shorebirds and some mammals living along the coast.
Algal bloom likely culprit Instead, the study said the mass mortality was likely caused by a harmful algal bloom. Such blooms are expected to occur more often due to the combination of global warming, ocean acidification, and land-use changes. Jurgens said that is all the more reason why documenting such mass mortality events is important to better understand - and prepare for --trends happening to ocean ecosystems.
'We might forget' "If someone were to come to this area, they wouldn't know these six-armed sea stars existed here, even though this has been a main part of their species range," Jurgens said. "If something disappears and we don't document it, we might not ever know it was there, and we might forget."
Related Links University of California - Davis Water News - Science, Technology and Politics
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