Laura James called it one of the saddest things she's
ever seen underwater. Sea stars, iconic and ever present
in Northwest coastal waters, were suddenly becoming
sick and dying before her eyes in numbers too great to
count. The long-time Puget Sound diver said she's never
seen anything like this in 20 years of diving.
She had heard recent reports from the Vancouver
Aquarium, where diving biologists found sunflower sea
stars in Vancouver Harbour and Howe Sound dying
by the thousands. James wondered how sea stars in
Seattle's Elliott Bay were faring, so in November, she
took her underwater camera to dive the West Seattle
dive site Cove 1, where the underwater pilings are
normally covered with an army of brightly colored sea
stars. But now they had transformed into pale, decaying
piles of mush. Stars that had not yet disintegrated
appeared to be so weak, she said, that they are being
torn apart by the weight of their own bodies. ( See James'
before-and-after video at http://kuow.org/post/watch-underwater-video-sea-stars-dying-west-seattle ).
These mass dying events have been coined Sea Star
Wasting Syndrome, and recent surveys along the West
Coast have found evidence of die-offs as far north as
Whittier, Alaska and as far south as Orange County
in California. So far scientists have only guesses about
what might be causing this underwater epidemic; perhaps
a virus, bacteria or something else entirely.
The Vancouver Aquarium ( www.vanaqua.org/act/research/sea-stars ) and the University of Santa Cruz
( www.eeb.ucsc.edu/pacificrockyintertidal/data-products/sea-star-wasting/index.html#track-disease )
are asking people to report any sightings of dying sea
stars. Both organizations are mapping their findings
as well ( http://data.piscoweb.org/marine1/seastardisease.html ).
You don't have to be a diver to see evidence of sea
stars dying. James also shot video below of dead sun
stars that had washed up on shore at Brace Point in
West Seattle. "I saw 100 dying sea stars in one area,
and we're getting reports of it all over Puget Sound,"
James told Seattle radio station KUOW. "It's huge,
and it's frightening because nobody knows what's
going on."