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A visit
to Cannon Beach in the summer of 2014 finds distressing news: starfish
are dying off due to a mysterious 'wasting disease.' At this time
no one is certain where it came from or what it is, exactly.
Affected starfish begin to lose their grip on the rocks, and their
limbs turn gelatinous and even fall off. Eventually, the creature
dies. When we were here in June, we didn't see one healthy
starfish, and only a few sick ones, even. The rest were already
gone. On the other hand, the low tide exposes tide pools teeming
with sea anenomes, in some places carpeting the sandy bottoms of the
tide pools. Giant specimens hang from the rocks into the water
below.
Starfish Wasting Disease
A dead starfish invites the attention of this seagull.
Sea Anenomes Fill the Ecosystem Niches
Small anenomes carpet the bottom of a tidepool.
Mussels, welks, snails and barnacles cover the rocks as usual. |
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