2022
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3798
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Assessment of the impacts of an unprecedented heatwave on intertidal shellfish of the Salish Sea

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Cited by 68 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Sessile species, which are unable to retreat to cooler microhabitats, were especially adversely impacted. Barnacle and mussel mortality, and the accompanying foul odor, was reported by researchers and concerned citizens from the southern end of Puget Sound, Washington State, to the BC Central Coast 61 . Mortality was particularly pronounced in the Strait of Georgia, where temperatures were especially high, and low tides were centered in the middle of the afternoon.…”
Section: Marine Lifementioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Sessile species, which are unable to retreat to cooler microhabitats, were especially adversely impacted. Barnacle and mussel mortality, and the accompanying foul odor, was reported by researchers and concerned citizens from the southern end of Puget Sound, Washington State, to the BC Central Coast 61 . Mortality was particularly pronounced in the Strait of Georgia, where temperatures were especially high, and low tides were centered in the middle of the afternoon.…”
Section: Marine Lifementioning
confidence: 96%
“…Scaling up to the entire barnacle zone at this site (18 m wide in the cross-shore direction) suggests this heatwave killed roughly 10 million barnacles along a single 100 m stretch of cobble shoreline. Qualitative surveys of barnacle and mussel mortality at other sites in BC and Washington State suggest that these high rates of mortality were experienced throughout much of Puget Sound and the Strait of Georgia, with lower but still noticeable mortality further north along the BC Central Coast 61 .…”
Section: Marine Lifementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Characteristic patterns were identified thanks to the replication of surveys over consecutive years, which is a desirable approach for coastal biogeographic research (Raimondi et al, 2019). In addition to its inherent value to advance NW Atlantic intertidal biogeography, the resulting database on species distribution should also be valuable to quantify ecological change decades into the future as climate change and other anthropogenic influences unfold (Sagarin et al, 1999;Wethey and Woodin, 2008;Wilson et al, 2019;Menge et al, 2022;Monteiro et al, 2022;Navarrete et al, 2022;Raymond et al, 2022;Storch et al, 2022). In this sense, this study identifies environmental variables that could be monitored regularly to help predict possible biological changes (Herfindal et al, 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Climate models predict that by 2100 Salish Sea surface temperatures will increase by approximately 1.57 °C and estuarine and intertidal ecosystems, the ecosystems in which kelp crabs are found, warming more intensely by 3.23 °C ( Khangaonkar et al., 2019 ; Berry et al., 2021 ). Short-term, intense periods of warming due to atmospheric heatwaves are also becoming more common and have created large-scale shifts in the structure of kelp forests ( Berry et al., 2021 ; Khangaonkar et al., 2021 ; McPherson et al., 2021 ; Raymond et al., 2022 ). Atmospheric heatwaves are short time periods (2+ days) of elevated air temperatures, based on historical averages for a given area, that influence shallow nearshore environments ( Raymond et al., 2022 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%