
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
A mysterious wasting disease has been decimating sea star populations along the West Coast since 2013. The illness works quickly, causing sea stars to lose limbs and reducing them to a pile of goo in a matter of weeks. Sunflower sea stars have been particularly hard-hit — roughly 90% of their global population has succumbed to the disease, possibly contributing to the demise of many West Coast kelp forests.
The cause of the wasting disease has stumped scientists for more than a decade. But now, a team of Northwest researchers have identified a bacteria that appears to be behind the illness.
Alyssa Gehman is a marine disease ecologist at the Hakai Institute, a marine research organization in British Columbia. She joins us with more details on what the breakthrough could mean for sea star recovery.
4.5
272272 ratings
A mysterious wasting disease has been decimating sea star populations along the West Coast since 2013. The illness works quickly, causing sea stars to lose limbs and reducing them to a pile of goo in a matter of weeks. Sunflower sea stars have been particularly hard-hit — roughly 90% of their global population has succumbed to the disease, possibly contributing to the demise of many West Coast kelp forests.
The cause of the wasting disease has stumped scientists for more than a decade. But now, a team of Northwest researchers have identified a bacteria that appears to be behind the illness.
Alyssa Gehman is a marine disease ecologist at the Hakai Institute, a marine research organization in British Columbia. She joins us with more details on what the breakthrough could mean for sea star recovery.
9,167 Listeners
38,580 Listeners
3,906 Listeners
37,832 Listeners
25 Listeners
25,787 Listeners
220 Listeners
14,541 Listeners
134 Listeners
86,739 Listeners
110,617 Listeners
4 Listeners
10,128 Listeners
4,204 Listeners
16,063 Listeners
5,986 Listeners
975 Listeners
15,405 Listeners
218 Listeners
10,492 Listeners
180 Listeners