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By Sandi Doughton
The Seattle Times
Sunday 01 October 2006
On
the Bering Sea - As the research vessel Thomas G. Thompson steamed
toward St. Paul Island, crab fisherman Wayne Baker was holed up in the
tiny Alaskan harbor, waiting for a break in the weather.
It hadn't been a great season so far.
"I've never seen so many blanks," said Baker, who set pots for four days without pulling up a single crab.
St.
Paul is a speck of land in the Bering Sea, the treacherous expanse of
water that separates Siberia and Alaska near the top of the world.
Since
Russian fur-traders came seeking otter pelts in the 1700s, this
northernmost reach of the Pacific Ocean has created fortunes and
claimed the lives of mariners drawn by its astounding bounty of marine
life. Whales, walruses, seals - one species after another was
slaughtered to the verge of extinction, yet a wealth of living
resources remained untapped.
Today
the Bering Sea yields half of all seafood harvested in the United
States. The annual catch is valued at $1.7 billion. The bulk of that
money goes into the pockets of fishermen and processing companies based
in Seattle - a 12-day sail from St. Paul.
But
the nation's richest ocean ecosystem is in the midst of a major
upheaval, and scientists suspect global warming is at least partly to
blame. Researchers like those who spent a month this spring on the
University of Washington's Thompson are trying to figure out what the
future holds for the region called America's "fish basket."
Crabbers like Baker are already feeling the effects.
In
the past six years, snow crab catches have dropped 85 percent. Most
other crab species are in a similar slump. Overfishing is probably a
factor - but not the only one. Biologists also have documented a
northward shift of crab populations, away from warming waters in the
traditional fishing grounds of the southern Bering Sea.
Fur
seal numbers are dwindling, despite a 20-year-old ban on commercial
hunting. Stellar sea lions were declared endangered in 1997. Seabirds
that once flocked to the region by the millions are in precipitous
decline.
The changes coincide with rising water temperatures and shrinking sea ice cover.
"In
the Bering Sea ... rapid climate change is apparent, and its impacts
significant," scientists concluded in the 2004 Arctic Climate Impact
Assessment.
Not all the impacts are negative - at least from a human perspective.
Warmer
water favors some species, including pollock, the "money" fish that
dwarfs all other fisheries worldwide and winds up primarily in
imitation crab, fish sticks and fish burgers. A fleet of ships, mostly
from Washington, mines nearly 3 billion pounds of pollock from the
Bering Sea each year - the equivalent of 10 pounds for every man, woman
and child in the United States.
"This
is not a clear doomsday story," said George Hunt, a University of
Washington ecologist who monitored birds during the Thompson cruise.
"If temperatures continue to increase, there's a better than even
chance pollock fishing will improve."
But
there also are indications the Bering Sea's fabled productivity may be
diminishing - and that sustained warming could bring nasty surprises.
Stocks
of most other fish species, including yellowfin sole and Greenland
turbot, have been dropping since the late 1970s and federal biologists
warned in a report last year that "substantial reductions in total
catches may be necessary in the near future."
"There will be losers," Hunt said.
Study in Tough Conditions
The
Thompson called at St. Paul on a blustery day to swap out crew members.
The 274-foot ship stood off the treeless island while a skiff shuttled
people back and forth. The sky was the color of concrete, the sea like
slate. A 3-foot chop hurled stinging water over the small craft's bow.
With a wind chill that plunged the temperature into single digits, global warming seemed like a theorist's dream.
Few
people venture here, but growing numbers have vicariously experienced
the Bering Sea's rigors through "The Most Dangerous Catch." The
Discovery Channel show tracks the crews of several crab boats as they
battle 60-knot winds, mountainous waves and ice that swallows up their
pots. At least 27 fishermen have perished in the Bering Sea over the
past decade.
Conditions
aren't as death-defying on a research ship, but scientists on the first
leg of the Thompson's voyage grappled with ice-encrusted equipment and
squalls that rocked the ship so violently everyone was forced below
decks.
Many
of these scientists have studied the Bering Sea for 20 years or more.
Most work for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
whose Alaska Fisheries Science Center in Seattle monitors the
ecosystem, estimates fish populations and figures out how much can be
safely harvested.
Their trip this spring was focused on a cornerstone of the Bering Sea ecosystem that is beginning to vanish: ice.
About
80 percent of the southeastern Bering Sea used to freeze every winter.
Since the 1970s, the ice cover has shrunk as average water temperatures
have risen by as much as 4 degrees Fahrenheit. Now, the prime fishing
grounds remain ice-free most years. The northern Bering Sea still
freezes in winter, but floes are thinner and patchy.
"You
expect normal climate fluctuations, but now it's been about 30 years
and we just continue to get warmer," said NOAA biologist Jeff Napp, one
of the cruise organizers.
Last
winter was a cold exception to the trend, with conditions that would
have seemed normal several decades ago. But once the ice started
melting in late May, it pulled back more rapidly than usual.
For creatures adapted to a frozen world, the loss of ice can be catastrophic.
Walruses
and so-called ice seals haul out on floes to give birth and rear their
pups. As the area that freezes each year shrinks, the animals are
forced farther north and into deeper water. More walrus pups are being
abandoned - a possible sign that adults can't reach the bottom anymore
to fetch clams.
Short-tailed
shearwaters migrate more than 9,000 miles from Australia, trusting the
normal interplay of ice, sunlight and water temperatures will guarantee
a feast of tiny shrimp when they arrive. In 1997, a half-million of the
albatross-like birds starved to death because off-kilter weather
triggered a chalky algae bloom that obscured their prey.
Fish also are highly selective about temperature, which varies with the amount of ice.
"It
only takes a little bit of warming to change from a place with seasonal
ice cover to no ice cover," Hunt said. "That's why these high latitudes
are expected to be the places where long-term global warming shows up
first and has its most profound impacts."
The
Alaskan Arctic is replete with evidence of global warming, from forest
fires to melting permafrost and shifting whale migrations. But those
changes mainly affect local residents. What happens in the Bering Sea
reaches into the Seattle economy and world seafood markets.
The Hunt for Algae
The trick to doing science on sea ice is picking the right floe.
It
has to be big enough for people to stand on and thick enough to support
their weight. Cracks or thin spots can mean a plunge into 35-degree
water.
From
the Thompson's bridge, NOAA oceanographer Edward Cokelet spotted a
likely candidate: flat and about the size of a volleyball court. The
ship was northwest of St. Paul, sailing between long fingers of ice.
Cokelet and two colleagues loaded their gear into a Zodiac and zoomed
toward their target.
Like
a floating dock, the floe bobbed with the swells as Cokelet fired up a
gas-powered coring tool. Within minutes, he extracted a cylinder of ice
about 2 feet long - the thickness of the floe. After photographing the
core, Cokelet sawed it into 4-inch slices. Back on the ship, scientists
would melt the slices, analyzing their nutrient content and looking for
algae, the microscopic plants that form the basis of the food web.
As unlikely as it seems, the presence of ice probably boosts the Bering Sea's productivity.
Scientists
believe areas that freeze in the winter experience an algae population
explosion - called a bloom - early in the spring, thanks to plants that
flourish under the ice. The frigid water that time of year limits the
number of tiny, algae-eating animals called zooplankton.
That
means much of the algae falls to the bottom when it dies, a feast for
bottom-dwellers and bottom-feeders like worms, crabs, flatfish and
diving ducks. Walruses and gray whales also thrive in a bottom-up
ecosystem rich in the clams and shrimp-like amphipods that make up the
bulk of their diets.
University
of Tennessee biologist Jacqueline Grebmeier has dredged sediment
samples from the northern Bering Sea for the past 20 years, as ice
cover has shrunk. She's measured a decrease in nutrients and the amount
of life the muck can support. Even with this year's extensive ice
sheet, productivity levels did not rebound, said Grebmeier, who
collected samples during a separate research cruise in late spring.
"If
we have colder water again for a while, the animals that were there
won't necessarily come back," she said. "Once you change an ecosystem,
it's very difficult to put it back the way it was."
Where
ice has vanished, algae don't bloom until later in the spring. By then,
the water has warmed slightly and zooplankton are abundant. The little
animals gobble up the plants, so less food falls to the bottom.
Instead, the zooplankton nourish a food chain that favors fish like
pollock and cod and fish-eating mammals like killer whales.
"It's a dramatic change, and it's happened in my lifetime," Grebmeier said.
Polar Cowboys
The
seal shifted nervously on the ice, craning her neck to get a better
look at the creatures approaching from the sea. She probably had never
seen humans before. Now, three Zodiacs were buzzing toward her from
different directions.
Reluctant to abandon her days-old pup, she hesitated too long.
The
moment the rubber boats hit the ice, biologists camouflaged in white
smocks leapt out and raced toward the animals. Wielding what looked
like giant butterfly nets, they ensnared the mother, then straddled her
back like bull riders. In fact, the group from NOAA's Marine Mammal
Laboratory in Seattle jokingly call themselves "polar cowboys."
The
150-pound female bucked and bellowed. Sitting astride his catch, Bob
Montgomery slipped a jacket over her eyes. Her struggles subsided.
"It's a ribbon seal," he said. "And she's a good mom."
The male pup, cloaked in thin, white baby fur, went limp, as if trying to disappear against the snowy backdrop.
No
creature may be more threatened by the loss of ice in the Bering Sea
than the ribbon seal, which is marked with a circular white band that
gives it a clownish appearance. Little is known about the species -
except its absolute dependence on ice as a platform for breeding and
birthing.
One
of four ice-dependent seal species, ribbon seals lack the wariness of
animals that live farther north in polar bear territory. If ice
vanishes from the Bering Sea, forcing the seals into the Arctic basin,
their prospects are grim.
"I
think we could be looking at the extinction of ribbon seals within this
century," said John Bengtson, director of the marine mammal lab.
He
was crouched on the ice, mixing epoxy to glue a satellite transmitter
to the female's back. The transmitters track the seals' movements until
they molt, shedding the instruments along with their tattered fur
coats.
The
NOAA team helped tag the first ribbon seals last year on the Russian
side of the Bering Sea. They discovered the animals travel all across
the basin, diving up to 1,000 feet to feed. As if on cue, they all
headed to the edge of the ice when the water began to freeze in
November, probably to haul out and rest.
Information
on the seals' movements and behavior helps scientists understand their
life cycles and design surveys to estimate the species' populations.
"We need to start paying attention now," Bengtson said, "or it will be too late."
Warming Trend at Work
With
binoculars at the ready, the University of Washington's Hunt and fellow
ecologist David Hyrenbach kept a lonely vigil on the Thompson's bridge
every day, logging each bird they spotted.
Their
tallies were sparse until the ship drew near the boundary between the
continental shelf and the deep basin to the west and south.
Nutrients
swept up along this undersea cliff sparked a flurry of activity in the
water, and gulls, kittiwakes and fulmars dived and wheeled in search of
food.
The interplay between deep and shallow water is one of the main reasons the Bering Sea supports so much marine life.
With
water up to 13,000 feet deep, the basin serves as a repository for some
of the planet's most nutrient-rich water, delivered there by global
currents.
The
great fisheries occur on the shelf - an area bigger than Washington,
Oregon and California combined - where the water is less than 500 feet
deep. Sunlight penetrates the vast expanse, nurturing algae. Winds mix
nutrients through much of the water column.
One
of the more disturbing changes in the past 25 years has been a
slackening of the summer storms responsible for that mixing - which
could lead to an overall drop in the Bering Sea's productivity. Since
1980, summer wind speeds have been well below normal, said Jim
Overland, an oceanographer with the Pacific Marine Environmental
Laboratory in Seattle, a co-sponsor of the expedition.
But
weather in the Bering Sea has always varied wildly. Historical records
show cycles of alternating cold and warm conditions that last for
roughly a decade, accompanied by corresponding booms and busts in fish
populations.
Those
cycles haven't ended, but there are many signs that a longer-term
warming trend is at work as well, Overland said. The current
temperature increase extends across the Arctic from Norway to Siberia
and Alaska. Temperatures still vary year to year, but there haven't
been any major cold spots in the last two decades, he said.
The
intense warming between 2000 and 2005 also doesn't fit any historic
pattern. And even if 2006 marks the start of another cool cycle for the
Bering Sea, it almost certainly won't be as pronounced as in the past,
said Overland, who has studied Arctic climate for nearly 30 years.
"What it will do is slow the rate of warming."
Unless
carbon-dioxide emissions from cars and industry are sharply curbed, the
Arctic Climate Impact Assessment predicts average temperature increases
of 5 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit on land and up to 13 degrees over the
northern oceans within the next century.
None of which is very helpful to folks like Baker, the crab fisherman who sheltered in St. Paul harbor this spring.
The Future of the Fisheries
Fisheries
have always yo-yoed, Baker pointed out. In some years, crabs were
plentiful in the eastern Bering Sea. In other years, the action shifted
west.
"I think they're just going to keep moving," he said, with a shrug.
A
few industries, like oil and shipping, are preparing for the day when
ice-free Arctic seas allow for exploration and commerce. That kind of
planning is tough for the fishing industry, said Gunnar Knapp, a
University of Alaska economist who studies the seafood business.
"They're
very aware that global warming could have significant impacts, but the
scientists aren't able to give them any firm predictions," he said.
"The industry is focused on the here and now."
Over
the past few years, scientists have discussed what climate change might
mean for fishing worldwide. But concrete answers remain elusive because
marine ecosystems are still so poorly understood.
Even
in Alaska, where the fisheries are considered the best-managed in the
world, biologists can't predict how a tug on one part of the ecological
web will reverberate through the others.
Consider the arrowtooth flounder, which has proliferated as the Bering Sea warms.
Arrowtooths
are big and look like they would be good eating, said Teressa
Kandianis, whose Bellingham, Wash.-based Kodiak Fish Company owns two
Alaska trawlers. "But when you go to cook it, the meat just melts."
Attempts to find a market for the fish have generally failed, she said.
The flounder is also a fierce predator of young fish.
Could that serve as a check on expanding pollock populations?
Recent
surveys measured the first drop in pollock populations in six years,
and federal biologists are recommending a 17 percent cut in harvest
levels next year.
No
one knows exactly what's going on, but that's the type of question the
researchers on the Thompson hope to be able to answer some day.
Kandianis hopes her company will be able to adapt as the mix of fish in the Bering Sea changes.
"One species' abundance might go down, but another one typically is going to come up," she said, then paused.
"Unless there's nothing there."
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