The Perfect Storm: Multiple Climate Stressors Push Kelp Forest Beyond Tipping Point in Northern California.

Thu, Jul 18th 2019, 1:00pm - 2:30pm
Webcast Only

Extreme climatic events have recently impacted marine ecosystems around the world, including foundation species such as kelps. We quantify the rapid climate-driven catastrophic shift in 2014 from a previously robust kelp forest to unproductive urchin barrens in northern California. Bull kelp canopy was reduced by 93% along >350 km of coastline. Twenty years of kelp ecosystem surveys reveal the timing and magnitude of events, including mass mortalities of sea stars (2013-) and red abalone (2017-), extent of nearshore ocean warming (2014-2017), and the sea urchin population explosion (2015-). These stressors led to the unprecedented and long-lasting decline of the kelp forest and the ecosystem services is supports such as the red abalone and sea urchin fisheries.

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Brought to you by CDFW Conservation Lectures. Find more on upcoming lectures at https://www.wildlife.ca.gov/Conservation/Lectures