Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Once Populous Sea Stars Disappearing Because Of Warm Water And Disease

The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2019 09:21 PM

    VANCOUVER — Warm waters and infectious disease have been determined as the causes of a die-off of sunflower starfish along the Pacific coast, says a newly released study.


    Sunflower sea stars are among the largest starfish in the world and come in a variety of bright colours, including purple and orange. Some of them grow to more than a metre long and are so quick they "literally run across the seascape," said Joseph Gaydos, the senior author of the study.


    "But when this disease happens it's like a zombie apocalypse," said Gaydos, who's with the SeaDoc Society out of the University of California, Davis.


    "It can have 24 arms and all of a sudden it's walking around and its arms are just falling off. And then all of a sudden the whole body just seems to melt."


    So, what used to be a "big, beautiful sea star," and weighed about five kilograms resembles a pile of calcified parts within days, he said.


    "It's just a really ugly and fast disease for these sunflower sea stars."


    In 2013, scientists began noticing populations of the species declining between 80 and 100 per cent in deep and shallow waters from Alaska and British Columbia right down to California. The population information was collected by scuba divers and deep trawls.


    Sunflower sea stars are found in waters from hundreds of metres to just three metres.


    Diego Montecino-Latorre, a study co-author, and also from the University of California, Davis, said scientists found an association between increased water temperature and seeing fewer sea stars.


    Gaydos said the temperature increases of the water were not the same in all areas.


    Oceans are "not like a bathtub" with consistent temperatures throughout, he said, adding that some places in California saw an increase of about 4 C while places in Washington noted an increase of 2.5 C.


    One of the theories put forward by scientists is that an increase in temperature makes the sea stars more susceptible to the disease that was already present, especially since sea stars don't have complex immune systems, he said.


    Study co-author Drew Harvell, a Cornell University professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, said the heat wave in the oceans caused by global warming is making the sea star wasting disease worse and killing the starfish faster.


    Gaydos said sunflower sea stars are voracious predators, and when they decline the numbers of sea urchin can increase.


    Such disease outbreaks can have a big consequence on the whole ecosystem, he said.


    "Urchins can mow down kelp forests and then when you lose kelp you lose biodiversity," he said. "Kelp is a place for fish to hide out, kelp is a food for other animals."


    Kelp beds were already struggling, he added.


    "Kelp also don't do well when ocean temperatures increase so it's like a one-two punch for kelp."


    One of the options to help kelp is selective harvest of sea urchins, which is being tested in California, Gaydos said.


    And an option to help the population of sunflower sea stars is captive breeding where animals that are more resistant to the virus can be selected, he said.


    Gaydos said the die-off is a wake-up call.


    "It's hard to keep an eye on what's happening in the ocean but we need to pay attention because this happened over a very short period of time," he said. "To have a whole species almost disappear, that's not good."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Singer Jeremy Gabriel Who Won Rights Case Against Comedian Exits Social Media Following Threats

    Jeremy Gabriel won a human rights case against comedian Mike Ward in 2016, arguing that a joke mocking his disability had amounted to discrimination.

    Singer Jeremy Gabriel Who Won Rights Case Against Comedian Exits Social Media Following Threats

    Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System

    Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System
    The border agency received approximately $40 million over five years to help enforce the new cannabis law.

    Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System

    Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School

    Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School
    The 11-year-old, identified only as AB, testified Tuesday before Ontario's human rights tribunal in a case focusing on how rolling back the curriculum impacts LGBTQ students.

    Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School

    Netflix Apologizes To Lac-Megantic For Using Rail Disaster Footage In 'Bird Box'

    MONTREAL — Netflix is apologizing to the people of Lac-Megantic after actual footage of the 2013 rail disaster that devastated the town was used in dramas on the streaming service.

    Netflix Apologizes To Lac-Megantic For Using Rail Disaster Footage In 'Bird Box'

    Jason Kenney Accuser Declines To Specify Which Housing Rules He Says Kenney Broke

    A lawyer accusing Alberta United Conservative Leader Jason Kenney of breaking parliamentary residency rules while serving as an MP is declining to explain which regulation he believes Kenney broke or how he broke it.

    Jason Kenney Accuser Declines To Specify Which Housing Rules He Says Kenney Broke

    AG Hopes Federal Election Won't Get In Way Of Ottawa Co-Operating With B.C.

    AG Hopes Federal Election Won't Get In Way Of Ottawa Co-Operating With B.C.
    British Columbia's attorney general says he's hoping a federal election campaign won't get in the way of Ottawa fully co-operating with the province to deal with serious money-laundering issues.

    AG Hopes Federal Election Won't Get In Way Of Ottawa Co-Operating With B.C.