By studying the effects of warmer marine water on the tiny
plant-like organisms called phytoplankton, scientists at Ecology are learning how
the Puget Sound ecosystem responds to climate change.
They did so when a mass of warm water nicknamed “the Blob”
made its way to the Puget Sound in 2015. This unusually warm water gave
scientists the opportunity to see what a world with warmer oceans might look
like.
The Blob changed the timing and size of phytoplankton
blooms significantly; spring blooms happened earlier than usual, and
summer blooms were dramatically larger than in previous years.
Most of the marine food web depends on phytoplankton blooms
happening at certain times. Because phytoplankton are a key source of energy, their
availability affects the life cycles of marine creatures.
Ecology’s Senior Oceanographer, Dr. Christopher Krembs, tells
us more.
Krembs: “A lot of life cycles of invertebrates and fish are
triggered by temperature. . . . for little larvae that come out of their eggs
and for juvenile fish and other species, it is important that they find their
food early on in their life cycle because most of the juveniles die if they
don’t find optimal conditions.”
If phytoplankton blooms don’t align with critical
developmental stages of marine creatures like small fish and krill, the entire
food web can suffer. A healthy marine food web is essential to regional efforts
to recover salmon and Southern
Resident Killer Whale populations, as well as to support the commercial,
tribal, and recreational shellfish industries.
Krembs says that the data from 2015 will help scientists
model climate change more accurately.
Krembs: “When you see a
scenario, you become much better at predicting the future, because now you have
environmental data that you can calibrate your models with. And so our
predictions become better.”
More research on how a warming
climate may affect Puget Sound ecosystems has already begun. To learn more,
visit Ecology’s webpage about the Salish
Sea Model.
By Ruth Froese, Environmental Assessment Program Communications
By Ruth Froese, Environmental Assessment Program Communications
No comments:
Post a Comment