Extreme heat cooked mussels, clams and other
shellfish alive on beaches in Western Canada
By David
Williams, CNN
Updated
2125 GMT (0525 HKT) July 10, 2021
(CNN)The
devastating heat wave that ravaged British Columbia last week is being blamed
for a massive die-off of mussels, clams and other marine animals that live on
the beaches of Western Canada.
Christopher
Harley, a professor in the zoology department at The University of British
Columbia, found countless dead mussels popped open and rotting in their shells
on Sunday at Kitsilano Beach, which is a few blocks away from his Vancouver
home.
Harley
studies the effects of climate change on the ecology of rocky shores where
clams, mussels and sea stars live, so he wanted to see how the intertidal
invertebrates were faring in the record heat wave that hit the area on June
26-28.
Christopher Harley estimates that a billion mussels,
clams and other animals may have died from the heat.
"I
could smell that beach before I got to it, because there was already a lot of
dead animals from the previous day, which was not the hottest of three,"
he said. "I started having a look around just on my local beach and
thought, 'Oh, this, this can't be good.'"
The next
day, Harley and one of his students went to Lighthouse Park in West Vancouver,
which he has been visiting for more than 12 years.
"It
was a catastrophe over there," he said. "There's a really extensive
mussel bed that coats the shore and most of those animals had died."
Unprecedented
heat
Mussels
attach themselves to rocks and other surfaces and are used to being exposed to
the air and sunlight during low tide, Harley said, but they generally can't
survive temperatures over 100 degrees for very long.
Temperatures
in downtown Vancouver were 98.6 degrees on June 26, 99.5 on the 27th and 101.5
on the 28th.
It was even
hotter on the beach.
Harley and
his student used a FLIR thermal imaging camera that found surface temperatures
topping 125 degrees.
At this
time of the year, low tide hits at the hottest part of the day in the area, so
the animals can't make it until the tide comes back in, he said.
Climate
scientists called the heat wave in British Columbia and the Pacific Northwest
in the United States "unprecedented" and warned that climate change would
make these events more frequent and intense.
"We
saw heat records over the weekend only to be broken again the next day,"
Kristina Dahl, a senior climate scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists,
told CNN, "particularly for a part of the country where this type of heat
does not happen very often."
Historic
Northwest heat wave 'virtually impossible' without human-caused
climate crisis, study finds
Historic
Northwest heat wave 'virtually impossible' without human-caused climate crisis,
study finds
An analysis
by more than two dozen scientists at World Weather Attribution found that the
heat wave "would have been virtually impossible without the influence of
human-caused climate change."
It was also
incredibly dangerous.
Lytton,
British Columbia, broke Canada's all-time record on June 30 when the
temperature topped 121 degrees. The town was all but destroyed in a deadly
wildfire.
There were
719 deaths reported to the province's coroners between June 25 and July 1 --
three times as many as would normally occur during that time period, according
to a statement from Lisa Lapointe, British Columbia's chief coroner. Hundreds
of people died in the US and many had to be hospitalized because of the heat.
A billion
animals may have died
Harley said
the heat may have killed as many as a billion mussels and other sea creatures
in the Salish Sea, which includes the Strait of Georgia, the Puget Sound, and
the Strait of Juan de Fuca, but he said that was a very preliminary estimate.
He said
that 50 to 100 mussels could live in a spot the size of the palm of your hand
and that several thousand could fit in an area the size of a kitchen stovetop.
"There's
4,000-some miles of shoreline in the Salish Sea, so when you start to scale up
from what we're seeing locally to what we're expecting, based on what we know
where mussels live, you get to some very big numbers very quickly," he
said. "Then you start adding in all the other species, some of which are
even more abundant."
He said
he's worried that these sorts of events seem to be happening more often.
It's
'inescapable': Pacific Islanders have tried to flee the climate crisis, only to
face new threats
Brian
Helmuth, a marine biology professor at Northeastern University, said that
mussel beds, like coral reefs, serve as an early warning system for the health
of the oceans.
"When
we see mussel beds disappearing, they're the main structuring species, so
they're almost like the trees in the forest that are providing a habitat for
other species, so it's really obvious when a mussel bed disappears," he
said. "When we start seeing die-offs of other smaller animals, because
they're moving around, because they're not so dense, It's not quite as
obvious."
He said the
death of a mussel bed can cause "a cascading effect" on other
species.
Both
scientists said they were concerned that these heat waves were becoming more
common and they weren't sure whether the mussel beds would be able to recover.
"What
worries me is that if you start getting heat waves like this, every 10 years
instead of every 1,000 years or every five years, then it's -- myou're getting
hit too hard, too rapidly to actually ever recover," Harley said.
"And then the ecosystem is going to just look very, very different."
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