BajaNomad
Not logged in [Login - Register]

Go To Bottom
Printable Version  
Author: Subject: Melting Sea Star epidemic
woody with a view
PITA Nomad
*******




Posts: 15939
Registered: 11-8-2004
Location: Looking at the Coronado Islands
Member Is Offline

Mood: Everchangin'

[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 06:08 AM
Melting Sea Star epidemic


http://www.storyleak.com/new-underwater-footage-reveals-exte...

Following the discovery of melting Sunflower sea stars off the coast of California, Washington state and Canada, videographer and underwater explorer Laura James uncovered well over 100 dead sea stars washed up on the beach in West Seattle’s Brace Point area earlier this month. After diving into the water to investigate, James reveals to Storyleak just how devastating the die-off has become.

“I’d heard that the sea stars were dying en mass but this was beyond my imagination,” James said. “It was like carnage or a mass grave. Dead and dying sea stars, body on top of body.”

James’ footage, which begins by showing unaffected sea starts in the same area a year prior, reveals that multiple sea star species have begun to literally disintegrate, despite earlier reports of only one species being affected.

“The Sunflower sea stars were the first to die, and it happened very fast. The Ochre and Mottled sea stars are now dying and these are the bodies you see piling up,” James said.

All stages of the melting process can be seen throughout the footage, beginning with a strange loss of coordination and inability to grasp onto objects, before the insides and limbs begin to fall apart, adding to the numerous white piles of melted sea star remains.

“As we were swimming along we also noted torn off legs from Sunflower stars strewn about, like the starfish had just been cruising along and one leg after another stopped working,” James said.

Controlled experiments in the late 1960s, which removed sea stars from Washington state’s Mukkaw Bay, produced a dramatic decrease in species diversity as hypothesized. Given the sea stars’ now evident role as a keystone species linked to maintaining ecological balance, many worry the die-off could begin the chain reaction, massively devastating the biodiversity of the entire west coast.

“The key here is citizen scientists helping to do the wide spread documentation and an involved public that can make its voice heard, push for answers, and not let this just become yesterdays news,” James said.

Although the cause has yet to be determined, speculations now range from a simple disease or parasite to the continued dumping of hundreds of tons of highly radioactive water into the ocean from Japan’s crippled ***ushima nuclear plant.

Unexplained sicknesses and death from species all across the west coast since the beginning of Japan’s 2011 nuclear disaster have increased the public’s fear that the situation’s true danger is being kept under wraps.

As far back as early 2012, nuclear radiation from the ***ushima power plant was being detected in bluefin tuna off California’s coast. Months earlier, cesium-137 was being found in almost all Japanese seafood being sold in Canada, with 100 percent of seaweed, carp, monkfish and shark showing detectable levels. Even with Japanese scientists finding high cesium levels in plankton all across the Pacific, the FDA has continued to claim that there is no need to test any seafood.

August of this year, Canadian biologists near Vancouver Island discovered herring bleeding out of their eyes and gill, while members of Canada’s aboriginal community began simultaneously reporting historically low Skeena River sockeye salmon returns.

“We hope to get out and document more sites… so we can also document the changes in biodiversity that are likely to occur,” James said in closing.

As the melting sea star phenomenon continues its downward trend, James plans to continue her research in hopes that others will join.

Read more: http://www.storyleak.com/new-underwater-footage-reveals-exte...




View user's profile
tecatero
Nomad
**




Posts: 208
Registered: 11-20-2013
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 06:14 AM


I heard about this last month.........seems Japan just keeps dumping into the ocean, oh and their whaling fleets are in full swing again, guess killing whales is more important than destroying the ocean. Also saw the map of the "ploom" in the pacific, allegedly North Shore on Oahu made be untouchable by 2015 due to radiation specs
View user's profile
Ken Bondy
Ultra Nomad
*****


Avatar


Posts: 3326
Registered: 12-13-2002
Member Is Offline

Mood: Mellow

[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 07:24 AM


Here's a picture of one I took last month in Morro Bay. I saw hundreds of them disintegrating like this:



[Edited on 12-20-2013 by Ken Bondy]




carpe diem!
View user's profile Visit user's homepage
captkw
Ultra Nomad
*****




Posts: 3850
Registered: 10-19-2010
Location: el charro b.c.s.
Member Is Offline

Mood: new dog/missing the old 1

[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 07:39 AM
IT'S GETTING WORSE !!


canary in the coal mine..............Check out " before its news" or WND and forget "snopes" crap
View user's profile
Ateo
Elite Nomad
******




Posts: 5914
Registered: 7-18-2011
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 08:19 AM


Quote:
Originally posted by captkw
canary in the coal mine..............Check out " before its news" or WND and forget "snipes" crap


All due respect, SNOPES debunks a whole ton of crap that old people send me in emails. =)




View user's profile
deportes
Nomad
**




Posts: 153
Registered: 4-24-2011
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 10:18 AM


***USHIMA fallout!
View user's profile
durrelllrobert
Elite Nomad
******




Posts: 7393
Registered: 11-22-2007
Location: Punta Banda BC
Member Is Offline

Mood: thriving in Baja

[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 10:30 AM


just plane UGLY!



Bob Durrell
View user's profile
Hook
Elite Nomad
******




Posts: 9011
Registered: 3-13-2004
Location: Sonora
Member Is Offline

Mood: Inquisitive

[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 10:37 AM


Boy, am I glad I've got a peninsula between me and Japan.



View user's profile
gnukid
Ultra Nomad
*****




Posts: 4411
Registered: 7-2-2006
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 10:40 AM


It's normal to have explosion of population and mass die-off of species especially in the ocean where food sources can rapidly increase and decrease.

Ocean observers will regularly see large populations dying off and move to other regions. Die-off in itself is not a sign of problems in fact it is part of the balance of life. Some species have millions of eggs and and off spring with the hope of a few surviving. When more do there is a population explosion that will eventually overfeed food source and die or move.

There are also normal changes in oceans ability to provide food source due to changes in global and solar system.

We ar currently in the lowest solar cycle of our lifetime and the sun may change it's position which will affect all life (and electronics) on earth and beyond.

Be wary of catastrophe reports.
View user's profile
wessongroup
Platinum Nomad
********




Posts: 21152
Registered: 8-9-2009
Location: Mission Viejo
Member Is Offline

Mood: Suicide Hot line ... please hold

[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 10:52 AM


Don't forget the PH .... just saying



View user's profile
woody with a view
PITA Nomad
*******




Posts: 15939
Registered: 11-8-2004
Location: Looking at the Coronado Islands
Member Is Offline

Mood: Everchangin'

[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 11:35 AM


well, i don't think there has ever been something like this that turns the host to sludge. starfish have been around 100 million years and i read that this is causing 100% mortality in these species. give it time.

if the FDA says we don't need to test the food for radiation i guess we have nothing to fear, right?




View user's profile
mtgoat666
Select Nomad
*******




Posts: 19593
Registered: 9-16-2006
Location: San Diego
Member Is Offline

Mood: Hot n spicy

[*] posted on 12-20-2013 at 11:47 AM


Quote:
Originally posted by gnukid
We ar currently in the lowest solar cycle of our lifetime and the sun may change it's position which will affect all life (and electronics) on earth and beyond.

Be wary of catastrophe reports.


stock up on tinfoil, before it is sold out. add an extra layer of tinfoil to your hat, and be sure to change the tinfoil in your underwear too.

watch out!
View user's profile
wilderone
Ultra Nomad
*****




Posts: 3868
Registered: 2-9-2004
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 12-29-2013 at 08:58 AM


Also east coast - not good.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/07/130723134250.ht...
View user's profile
Whale-ista
Super Nomad
****




Posts: 2009
Registered: 2-18-2013
Location: San Diego
Member Is Offline

Mood: Sunny with chance of whales

[*] posted on 12-29-2013 at 09:07 AM
Remember the abalone die off?


This reminds me of the "withering foot" disease that decimated West Coast abalone in the 90s. The cause (a virus) was ultimately identified but never controlled. The result is a universal crash of abalone all along the California coast.

There are some abalone stocks in Baja, and even boutique aqua-farms in places, but nothing like what used to be naturally abundant. I remember getting abalone from diver friends, and also while visiting family in Ensenada in the 70s, when abalone was cheap and easy to find. Now it is an expensive delicacy.

These sea life population crashes show the cumulative impacts of diseases, pollution, climate change and overfishing as well as variables we do not fully understand. Individually it is bad for a species, but collectively it is an indicator of declining overall ecosystem health, productivity, and species diversity.

Jellyfish, on the other hand, seem to be doing quite well. They are becoming the c-ckroaches of the ocean, thriving in compromised/polluted environments that are harmful to other animals.

(Edit) just read the article on the east coast die off. It claims it has happened before and populations recovered.

The difference is, there are many additional stressors in the environment now. Natural fluctuations in fisheries (sardines and anchovies) have been measured for thousands of years, using preserved deep water sediment and fish-scale counts. But The stress of industrial scale commercial fishing has reduced the recoveries over the last 100 years.

Only time will tell if the starfish can recover as they have done in the past, but the odds are against it.

[Edited on 12-29-2013 by Whale-ista]




\"Probably the airplanes will bring week-enders from Los Angeles before long, and the beautiful poor bedraggled old town will bloom with a Floridian ugliness.\" (John Steinbeck, 1940, discussing the future of La Paz, BCS, Mexico)
View user's profile
desertcpl
Super Nomad
****




Posts: 2400
Registered: 10-26-2008
Location: yuma,az
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 12-29-2013 at 11:00 AM


Quote:
Originally posted by deportes
***USHIMA fallout!




I think I will go with this one
View user's profile
bacquito
Super Nomad
****




Posts: 1615
Registered: 3-6-2007
Member Is Offline

Mood: jubilado

[*] posted on 2-1-2014 at 07:29 PM


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starfish_wasting_disease

There are a lot of articles on the web re. starfish die off and in some of the articles mention is made of a bacteria and warmer waters as suspects

[Edited on 2-2-2014 by bacquito]




bacquito
View user's profile
captkw
Ultra Nomad
*****




Posts: 3850
Registered: 10-19-2010
Location: el charro b.c.s.
Member Is Offline

Mood: new dog/missing the old 1

[*] posted on 2-2-2014 at 01:02 AM
Sea die off


whales,,dolphens,,herrings,,starfish,,Oarfish..seal pups.. its getting UgLY !! forget the abc,nbc,,cnn,fox and any major media lies.....we have been seeing more ocean death than ever in recorded history...FACT... !! can you say ***ED !! by japan....So Sad !!!......K&T
View user's profile

  Go To Top

 






All Content Copyright 1997- Q87 International; All Rights Reserved.
Powered by XMB; XMB Forum Software © 2001-2014 The XMB Group






"If it were lush and rich, one could understand the pull, but it is fierce and hostile and sullen. The stone mountains pile up to the sky and there is little fresh water. But we know we must go back if we live, and we don't know why." - Steinbeck, Log from the Sea of Cortez

 

"People don't care how much you know, until they know how much you care." - Theodore Roosevelt

 

"You can easily judge the character of others by how they treat those who they think can do nothing for them or to them." - Malcolm Forbes

 

"Let others lead small lives, but not you. Let others argue over small things, but not you. Let others cry over small hurts, but not you. Let others leave their future in someone else's hands, but not you." - Jim Rohn

 

"The best way to get the right answer on the internet is not to ask a question; it's to post the wrong answer." - Cunningham's Law







Thank you to Baja Bound Mexico Insurance Services for your long-term support of the BajaNomad.com Forums site.







Emergency Baja Contacts Include:

Desert Hawks; El Rosario-based ambulance transport; Emergency #: (616) 103-0262