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These sea stars were nearly wiped out — but B.C. researchers say fiords provided refuge

These sea stars were nearly wiped out — but B.C. researchers say fiords provided refuge

CBC03-04-2025
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B.C. researchers have found that the fiords of the Central Coast may be providing refuge for the critically endangered sunflower sea star, a discovery that could have implications for wider ecosystems at risk due to warming seas.
Nine out of 10 sea stars have been wiped out since 2013 due to sea star wasting disease, which has led to a mass death of the animals along North America's West Coast, from Alaska to Mexico. The sunflower sea star is listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
While the exact cause of the disease is unknown, scientists say it's had major ripple effects, as sunflower sea stars eat sea urchins and perform an important role in keeping those populations in check. Without them, urchins have flourished and been able to eat kelp forests, which further destabilizes marine ecosystems.
Now, after years of diving along B.C.'s Central Coast, researchers have found many healthy adult colonies of sunflower sea stars in the fiords there.
Alyssa Gehman, a scientist with the Hakai Institute and an adjunct professor at the University of B.C., co-authored a paper on the findings. What they found, she said, is that while sea star wasting disease has been found in fiords and sea stars have died there, the mortality rate is far lower than elsewhere in the ocean.
Researchers suspect the difference has something to do with water temperature. In fiords — long, narrow, and deep inlets often found between high cliffs along the central and north coasts — the ocean tends to be cooler than elsewhere.
Gehman said the research team was first alerted to the large number of sunflower sea stars in fiords by Central Coast Indigenous Resource Alliance divers who were looking for rockfish — and the two groups ended up collaborating on the final research paper.
"When we looked at the oceanography ... we found that where the sea stars are, it's colder," Gehman told Darius Mahdavi, CBC's science specialist. "That's our next thing, is trying to figure out exactly what that temperature relationship is, and how that's working."
Changes in seasons
Jeff Sha, an aquarium biologist at the Vancouver Aquarium who wasn't involved in the study, said scientists have evidence that sea star wasting disease thrives in warmer water.
"The higher the temperature, the more likely the onset of the disease, and the harder it is for an infected sea star to come back from that," he said.
"As temperatures are rising along our coastlines ... we've had a couple of heat domes in the last decade, each of those events basically was another round of devastation for the population."
Gehman said in the fiords, Arctic outflow conditions create cold winds in the winters, cooling the water and making the environment higher in oxygen, which is good for sea stars.
"In the summer, when it's hot, there's glacial runoff that comes through," she said. "And it's so fascinating, but it creates essentially a little freshwater river on the surface of the fiord."
Sha said sea stars don't like fresh water, which means they'll go deeper and into the colder water.
"The researchers are hypothesizing that that's kind of what's giving them a little bit of a refuge away from the warmer temperature zone, and keeping them healthy from the wasting disease," he said.
Implications for recovery efforts
Sha said sunflower sea stars, in particular, are a ferocious predator for sea urchins — and without them, there's been devastating effects for other species.
"Sea urchin populations have boomed on our coast, causing a decline in our algae and our kelp forest, which then removes habitats for rockfish and all these beautiful animals that we have," the biologist said.
WATCH | Some sea stars released into the wild:
Sunflower sea stars released into the wild after disease stunted population
7 months ago
Duration 4:13
Over the past decade, disease has killed off around five billion sunflower sea stars, disrupting underwater ecosystems from Alaska to California. Now, the starfish are being released back into the wild around the San Juan Islands in Washington State. They're the first of their kind to have been bred in captivity by researchers at the University of Washington. Jason Hosin, a University of Washington marine biologist, shares more about his research.
Gehman said some kelp forests along B.C.'s coast have been reduced to "urchin barrens," where all of the leafy portions of the kelp have been consumed by sea urchins.
The scientist said that, as researchers look to raise sunflower sea stars in the laboratory and put them back in the ocean, their work in the fiords could be important — though she acknowledged that climate change will continue to affect whether fiords can remain a "refuge habitat" for the species.
"There's hope that we could potentially raise stars that would be resistant to the disease," she said. "And this suggests that we need to pay attention to temperature when we're doing that work as well."
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Holzworth's 2021 study of WWLLN data found that from 2010 to 2020, warmer summers saw more lightning hitting above the 65th parallel (around the middle of Alaska). The hottest year in this stretch, 2019 (which was globally 0.93 degrees Celsius warmer than the 1951-1980 average), saw three times more lightning in the Arctic as a fraction of the global total than the coolest year, 2011 (which was 0.65 degrees Celsius warmer). In other words, a 0.3-degree Celsius bump in global temperature came with a tripling of Arctic lightning. That's just for one 10-year stretch, cautions Holzworth, and it isn't clear that this trend will continue. In fact, he says, his as-yet-unpublished analysis suggests that lightning has dipped a bit in the Arctic in the last few years. Yet the Finnish weather company Vaisala, which runs its own lightning detection network, has seen an even more dramatic spike in the Far North. 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All these factors have together led to more frequent large-fire years in Alaska. 'The big fire seasons are roughly doubling in frequency,' says Thoman. Lightning plays an important role in that. In 2015, for example, Alaska saw more than 50,000 strikes over a three-day period (more than a third of the state's annual average of 120,000 per summer), and it experienced its second largest fire season yet, with more than 5 million acres burned. Fire is a natural part of the northern ecosystem. But the new fire regime comes with hotter fires, says Thoman, which can incinerate rather than activate the seed cones of fire-adapted trees. Burning duff creates a huge amount of smoke, which is problematic for people who live downwind. And the burning of trees, which sometimes never grow back, can strip the landscape of shade and speed up permafrost melt, which releases methane — a powerful greenhouse gas. One recent study forecast that lightning strikes could more than double by 2100 in tundra and boreal forest areas that are underlain by permafrost. This, the authors write, could increase the area consumed by wildfire by more than five times and release large quantities of methane. Permafrost thaw isn't well represented in climate models, so the amount of greenhouse gas that might be released this way is unknown. 'There's not enough attention on this in my opinion,' says Thoman. There's one reason, though, to think that more lightning might help mitigate possible boosts in methane: by changing the chemistry of the atmosphere. In 2021, researchers flying planes over Colorado and Oklahoma to study the air during lightning storms were startled to find that strikes produced massive amounts of oxidants — more than 1,000 times the amount they were expecting to find. These oxidants — hydroxyl and the hydroperoxyl radical — are known to scrub away methane, acting like a kind of atmospheric cleanser. The effect can be dramatic, as Zhang and his colleagues learned by studying the reverse dynamic: a sharp increase in methane that occurred during Covid. The team calculated that the global decline in lightning — due to reduced traffic and air pollution during the pandemic — caused a dramatic 2 percent global reduction in hydroxyl in 2020, as compared to 2019. At the same time, atmospheric methane increased by about 15 parts per billion in 2020 — one of the biggest annual spikes ever seen and more than 50 percent greater than the rise in 2019. A host of different theories have been put forward to explain this methane boost, including industrial leaks and wetland emissions, but the lightning theory is powerful: Zhang estimates it could account for about half of the spike. For now, no one knows the likely magnitude of either effect. If lightning strikes continue to increase in the Arctic, or elsewhere, how much will that boost methane or mop it up? Thunderstorms, says Holzworth, play a hugely important role in moving ions and molecules around in the upper atmosphere, and the impacts of that activity on climate change are complex and unknown. 'These are pieces of the puzzle that need to be solved.' Holzworth thinks that in places where there's little lightning now, 'there will be more – maybe even in the Antarctic,' he says. 'But it's not so clear. The weather dynamics are changing.'

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