Lodi News-Sentinel

Study: Larvae have shell damage from ocean acidificat­ion

- By Hal Bernton

SEATTLE — Ocean acidificat­ion is damaging the shells of young Dungeness crab in the Northwest, an impact that scientists did not expect until much later this century, according to new research.

A study released this week in the journal Science of the Total Environmen­t is based on a 2016 survey of Oregon, Washington and British Columbia coastal waters that examined larval Dungeness. The findings add to the concerns about the future of the Dungeness as atmospheri­c carbon dioxide — on the rise due to fossil-fuel combustion — is absorbed by the Pacific Ocean and increases acidificat­ion.

“If the crabs are affected already, we really need to make sure we start to pay attention to various components of the food chain before it is too late,” said Nina Bednarsek, the lead author among 13 contributi­ng scientists. The study was funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Associatio­n (NOAA).

Dungeness sustain West Coast commercial seafood harvests typically worth more than $200 million annually, and are a mainstay for tribal and recreation­al crabbers. They have thrived in coastal waters that in recent years have been found to have hot spots of ocean acidificat­ion. This is due to periodic strong upwellings of deeper ocean water rich in carbon dioxide and surface waters that also have absorbed gas released by fossilfuel combustion and other human activity.

“This makes our region very unique,” said Richard Feely, a senior scientist at NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmen­tal Laboratory, who was one of the co-authors of the new study.

Research published in 2014 showed ocean-acidificat­ion harm to West Coast pteropods, small free-swimming snails that are food for Dungeness crab. And a laboratory study of Dungeness crab larvae released in May 2016 by the NOAA Northwest Fisheries Science Center showed that increased ocean acidificat­ion could also jeopardize the crab.

Bednarsek, Feely and their colleagues — for the first time — documented that some Dungeness larvae in the wild already had pitted and folded shells, described in their journal article as “severe carapace dissolutio­n,” and that these larvae were typically smaller in size.

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