Why some of British Columbia’s kelp forests are in more danger than others
For the future health of all life on this planet it is essential that we appreciate the value of these wonderful forests before it is too late.
Written by Samuel Starko, The University of Western Australia; Brian Timmer; Christopher Neufeld, University of British Columbia, and Julia K. Baum, University of Victoria
Lush underwater forests formed by large brown seaweeds known as kelp are among the most abundant and productive coastal ecosystems in Canada.
Kelp forests help to support fisheries, draw down carbon and improve water quality — in the process contributing billions to the global economy. Unfortunately, climate change is now a major threat to kelp forests. Kelp forests require cool water temperatures, and recent ocean warming has placed these valuable ecosystems in hot water.
In our new study, we highlight by just how much some of Canada’s kelp forests along the Pacific coast have declined. We also show that, despite recent impacts of climate change, kelp forests in some areas have remained stable, offering hope for future kelp forests and shedding light on the drivers of ecosystem resilience.
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Marine forests in hot water
The past decade has seen unprecedented warming along North America’s west coast. Beginning in 2014, a string of marine heat waves created warmer-than-usual conditions that have wreaked havoc on a range of ocean species.
Marine heat waves are becoming longer and more intense as greenhouse gas emissions continue. These heat waves are major drivers of oceanic change.
One of these major heat waves also magnified the ongoing seastar wasting disease epidemic, a phenomenon that killed millions of seastars from Mexico to Alaska. Effects of the loss of these voracious predators reverberated throughout coastal ecosystems, triggering a boom in the sea urchins that seastars typically eat. Overabundant urchins consumed large amounts of kelp. Left unchecked, sea urchins can mow down entire kelp forests.
Together, marine heat waves and seastar declines led to devastating kelp forest losses along many parts of North America’s west coast over the past decade. This included declines in Mexico and California. However, in British Columbia — an area with twice the amount of coastline as California, Oregon and Washington combined — the relative lack of monitoring programs has made it difficult to accurately assess the overall health of kelp forests. Until now.
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Threats to kelp in Western Canada
We brought together kelp forest researchers from across B.C. and combined data to assess how recent climatic and biological changes have impacted these vital ecosystems. Our team — which included scientists from universities, not-for-profits and Canadian and First Nations governments — collated data from on-the-ground surveys, and imagery of the floating kelp canopy taken from satellites, planes, helicopters and drones.
Thanks to ancient glaciers that carved up and reshaped Canada’s Pacific coast, B.C.’s kelp forests inhabit a rich mosaic of environments. Nearly 40,000 islands and dozens of glacial fjords create diverse habitats for kelp.
B.C.’s rich and varied coastline also creates a range of microclimates, areas that are either much warmer or much cooler than their surroundings. This means that even as the overall ocean warms, water temperatures vary considerably along B.C.’s coast.
In areas such as the Strait of Georgia and the inner parts of some fjords, we found that summertime waters now exceed the maximum temperatures kelp can withstand. In these areas, kelp forests have experienced large losses, especially over the past decade.
But temperature is not the whole story.
In some parts of B.C.’s central and northern coasts, some kelp forests are also in decline despite cooler waters. Groups of sea urchins visible in aerial photos suggest that expanding herbivore populations are to blame. Sea otters, essential keystone predators that could control urchins, were hunted to near extinction more than a century ago and have yet to recover in these regions.
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Reasons for optimism
Despite these impacts, in other parts of B.C. kelp forests have remained stable. In fact, some of these healthy kelp forests might even be growing. Areas with cool water temperatures, such as the Strait of Juan de Fuca, have stable kelp forests, despite extensive losses close by. These regions of cooler water could provide lasting refuge for kelp forests.
Kelp forests are also stable, and even expanding, in areas around northern Vancouver Island and parts of B.C.’s central coast where newly recovered sea otter populations help keep urchins at bay.
Together these patterns indicate that, even against the backdrop of large-scale ocean warming, small-scale differences in temperature or biodiversity can tip the balance for kelp forests teetering between stability and ecosystem loss. These patterns also suggest that ecosystems likely have the best chance of resilience to climate change when their structure is intact.
Innovative solutions are needed to save kelp
Knowledge is power. Our study provides the first province-wide assessment of how B.C. kelp forests are faring under intense ocean warming driven by climate change. This broad understanding positions decision-makers to prioritize areas for protection, management and restoration.
Global and regional initiatives to protect and restore kelp forests are gaining momentum. However, it will take more than passive protection to prevent kelp forest losses.
Innovative solutions are needed.
This might include restoration of important predators in the ecosystem, controlling urchins so that kelp forests can flourish, or developing new techniques to restore kelp forests using strains capable of surviving warming conditions.
There are inherent challenges to preserving kelp forests. It’s clear that the future of these vulnerable ecosystems depends a great deal on whether we value them enough to intervene to prevent further decline by providing the conditions for them to flourish in the future.
For the future health of all life on this planet it is essential that we appreciate the value of these wonderful forests before it is too late.
Written by Samuel Starko, Forrest Research Fellow, The University of Western Australia; Brian Timmer, PhD Student, Department of Biology, University of Victoria; Christopher Neufeld, Adjunct Professor in Biology, University of British Columbia, and Julia K. Baum, Professor of Biology, University of Victoria
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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