Site icon Medical Market Report

Mortality Event: How 10 Billion Crabs Went Missing In The Bering Sea

Over the last few years there has been a dramatic collapse in the Bering Sea snow crab population, with numbers declining by an astonishing 10 billion between 2018 and 2021.

The fall in numbers, thought to be among the largest losses of its kind, prompted the Alaskan Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) to close the 2022/23 fishing season in order to try and conserve and sustain stocks of the snow crabs, which are fished for food.

Advertisement

Rising temperatures in the ocean were believed to be, at least in part, to blame for the decline. As the name implies, snow crabs rely on the colder temperatures found in northern oceans. During the summer, young crabs mature in “cold pools” where melting ice lowers the temperature of the ocean floor to just above freezing. Higher temperatures can cause starvation events as well as disease in the crabs. 

Another possibility was that the crabs had moved to Russian waters, though there was not a corresponding increase in crab numbers there, or that recent surveys were poorly sampled. Looking into the decline though, a new team has found that a heatwave in the eastern Bering Sea during 2018 and 2019 may have led to a disaster, as the crabs were restricted in their range, triggering a starvation event.

The study, by researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), cited previous research that found the animals need significantly more food as the temperature increases, nearly doubling from 0-3°C (32-37.4°F). This is roughly the change snow crabs went through in the region from 2017-18. Coupled with a smaller range, thanks to cold pools reducing in size compared to other years, and it likely ended in the mortality event.

“The unprecedented caloric demands, coupled with a small area from which to forage relative to historical grounds, suggest that starvation likely played a role in the disappearance of more than 10 billion snow crab, similar to the marine heatwave–related collapse of Pacific cod in the Gulf of Alaska in 2016,” the team explained in their study, adding that “the mortality event appears to be one of the largest reported losses of motile marine macrofauna to marine heatwaves globally.”

Advertisement

The team writes that the climate crisis is the next existential threat to fisheries, with the snow crabs’ disappearance providing a prime example of how quickly populations can change. 

“The Bering Sea is on the frontlines of climate-driven ecosystem change,” they conclude, “and the problems currently faced in the Bering Sea foreshadow the problems that will need to be confronted globally”.

The study is published in Science.

Source Link: Mortality Event: How 10 Billion Crabs Went Missing In The Bering Sea

Exit mobile version