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bananas

(27,509 posts)
Wed Nov 6, 2013, 04:29 PM Nov 2013

PHOTOS: Sea star began "ripping itself into pieces" - Like a horror movie

http://enenews.com/my-sea-star-began-ripping-itself-into-pieces-scenes-from-a-horror-movie-ap-deaths-from-alaska-to-s-california-biologist-perhaps-most-concerning-is-how-many-species-seem-to-be-aff

PHOTOS: Sea star began “ripping itself into pieces” — Like a horror movie — AP: Deaths from Alaska to S. California — Biologist: Related to an environmental change? “An early warning that we aren’t picking up on?” — Professor: “None of us had ever seen anything like this before”

Published: November 4th, 2013 at 9:05 pm ET
By ENENews
67 comments

The Press Democrat (Santa Barbara), Nov. 2, 2013 (Emphasis Added): [...] The affliction, called sea star wasting disease, has killed up to 95 percent of the stars in some tide pool populations ranging from southeast Alaska to Santa Barbara in a manner similar to scenes from a horror movie. “They essentially melt in front of you,” said Pete Raimondi, chairman of the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UC Santa Cruz’s Long Marine Lab. [...] The disease has struck localized coastal areas before [...] but is already far more widespread, and its full extent is unknown. “We’ve never seen it at this scale up and down the coast,” Raimondi said. [...]

AP, Nov. 3, 2013: Widespread starfish deaths reported on West Coast [...] Sampling has found the disease in starfish from Alaska to Southern California [...] Raimondi says wasting disease has never been as widespread as researchers are finding now. [...] The disease usually affects one species [...] Steven Morgan, an environmental science professor at the Bodega Marine Laboratory at the University of California, Davis, has found emaciated sea stars on the rocks at Schoolhouse Beach north of Bodega Bay, but was unsure if wasting syndrome was the culprit. Still, Morgan found the starfish deaths a “strange anomaly.” “None of us had ever seen anything like this before,” he said.

UC Santa Cruz, Oct. 24, 2013: To date, we have received reports of at least 10 species of sea stars showing signs of infection. [...] Multiple other sites [...] have shown drastic declines in abundance below the fluctuation typically observed at those sites. [...]


SOURCE: Notes from a California naturalist
Notes from a California naturalist, Sept. 13, 2013: The last of my Pisaster ochraceus stars waited until today, three whole days after all of its conspecifics had died, to start ripping itself into pieces. [...] What happened in my seawater table over the past few weeks may be just the beginning of something really, really bad.


The Echinoblog, Oct. 14, 2013: [...] Canary in a Coal Mine- Global Warming? I think the thing that always concerns me about this whole thing is whether this whole phenomena-the die offs in British Columbia, the wasting disease observations in California and elsewhere – are all tied to a particular environmental change. [...] What if something is happening and this is an early warning that we aren’t picking up on? [...] What is perhaps most concerning is how MANY starfish species seem to be affected. [...] The effect on the ecosystem is likely to be significant.

Global Warming?

The Press Democrat, Nov. 2, 2013: Sea temperatures off Bodega Bay have been below average this year and are close to average throughout the northeast Pacific, without an El Niño or La Niña, said John Largier, an oceanographer at the Bodega Marine Lab. Raimondi said his data show the same thing, which “makes this event unusual and perhaps more disturbing.”

See also: TV: "Like they're melting... a lot of melting sea stars out there" says Seattle biologist -- Veterinarian: It's concerning, in under a week roughly 60% of species are sick or dying -- "Same thing happening near Canada and nobody’s sure why" (VIDEO)

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PHOTOS: Sea star began "ripping itself into pieces" - Like a horror movie (Original Post) bananas Nov 2013 OP
Nobody knows why.... katsy Nov 2013 #1
SOURCEY SOURCE SOURCE ON YOU! Bennyboy Nov 2013 #2
Could the "environmental change" be the recent introduction of nuclear isotopes into the ecosystem? The Stranger Nov 2013 #3
They need to explore the potential impact of Fukushima on this species. The Stranger Nov 2013 #4
> time ~> > toxicity, blkmusclmachine Nov 2013 #5
Haven't there been necropsies done? HooptieWagon Nov 2013 #6

katsy

(4,246 posts)
1. Nobody knows why....
Wed Nov 6, 2013, 04:33 PM
Nov 2013

Maybe start testing the pollutants from industry.... Or are we going the magical route.

We dump pollutants into our enivironments then feign shock at the resulting death of sea life. Go figure.

 

Bennyboy

(10,440 posts)
2. SOURCEY SOURCE SOURCE ON YOU!
Wed Nov 6, 2013, 05:02 PM
Nov 2013

enews? Aren't they ones drumming up all the hysteria over that Nuke Lear thing in Japan? SOURCEY SOURCE SOURCE ON YOU!

(sarcasm meter on high).....

The Stranger

(11,297 posts)
3. Could the "environmental change" be the recent introduction of nuclear isotopes into the ecosystem?
Wed Nov 6, 2013, 05:18 PM
Nov 2013

Please tell me that just one of these people who keep exclaiming "we've never seen this before" has thought of this already.

The Stranger

(11,297 posts)
4. They need to explore the potential impact of Fukushima on this species.
Wed Nov 6, 2013, 05:20 PM
Nov 2013

They've ruled out changes in sea temperature, yet keep talking about it on the Pacific Coast.

Please tell me someone is already on this.

 

HooptieWagon

(17,064 posts)
6. Haven't there been necropsies done?
Thu Nov 7, 2013, 01:13 AM
Nov 2013

Seems logical to start there. While it may not determined the cause, at least it would eliminate many possibilities. Strange that no article mentions that.

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