Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Climate change pushes B.C. urchins to shallows

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Feb, 2023 05:22 PM
  • Climate change pushes B.C. urchins to shallows

VANCOUVER - Pink sea urchins off the coast of Vancouver Island are expanding into shallower waters, in what researchers say is an indication of how rapidly climate change is affecting ocean life.

Researchers at Memorial University, Ocean Networks Canada and the University of Victoria found the urchins, living as deep as 400 metres below, were expanding their populations into shallower water at an average rate of 3.5 metres per year as ocean warming reduces oxygen levels and food sources at lower depths.

The study's co-author, Rylan Command, said heat domes and heat waves are becoming more common, and understanding how the ocean responds to those changes can have a direct impact on people.

The movement of the pink urchins over time could, for example, upset the balance with other sea creatures, leading them to replace other species, such as red sea urchin harvested in fisheries, he said.

"It's almost like an indicator that things are changing rapidly and that matters for people, because that's going to affect us too," he said.

Researchers looked at 14 years of data including before, during and after the marine heat wave known as "The Blob," which persisted in the Pacific Ocean between 2013 to 2016.

They used data from both an Ocean Networks Canada observatory and the Federal Fisheries and Oceans trawl survey to collect information from about 400 metres deep, covering an area of 760-square kilometres.

"We were able to get a holistic picture of how everything is changing. I think that kind of data combination is really important and really useful," Command said.

Study co-author Fabio De Leo, who's with Oceans Network Canada, said warming from The Blob destroyed much of the kelp the urchins eat, causing their populations to drop off dramatically.

"The kelp forests felt the marine heatwave pretty strongly. So, this essentially is one of the main food items for the pink urchin," he said.

The researchers say the warmer-than-normal surface temperatures also disrupted the ocean process known as "upwelling," when nutrient-rich water from lower depths cycles up to the surface, potentially affecting where the urchins find food.

The B.C. research matches similar work done in California in 2017, which found that pink urchins in that region were also seeking shallower waters.

De Leo said having data stretching over more than a decade is important for monitoring the area.

"We need to know how biodiversity and how marine communities are changing over time to adapt and to make plans," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Shortage of some antibiotics used to treat kids

Shortage of some antibiotics used to treat kids
Health Canada says that four pharmaceutical companies are experiencing shortages of drugs that contain amoxicillin, an antibiotic medication that’s commonly used to treat children with bronchitis, pneumonia and ear infections.

Shortage of some antibiotics used to treat kids

More health investment needs results: Trudeau

More health investment needs results: Trudeau
The meetings in Vancouver are the first time all of Canada's health ministers have gathered in person since 2018. The premiers met in July, when they asked the federal government to increase health transfers to 35 per cent, up from what they said was 22 per cent funding.  

More health investment needs results: Trudeau

Wind, snow hit parts of B.C. for another day

Wind, snow hit parts of B.C. for another day
Strong winds continue to buffet parts of coastal B.C. and the central Interior, packing gusts of at least 110 kilometres per hour along the north and central coasts, pushing wind chill factors in Terrace and elsewhere to -20 or lower.

Wind, snow hit parts of B.C. for another day

Relentless toll for overdose deaths: BC Coroner

Relentless toll for overdose deaths: BC Coroner
The service says 171 people died of toxic drugs in September, bringing the total for the year to 1,644, the largest number ever recorded for the first nine months of a calendar year.

Relentless toll for overdose deaths: BC Coroner

Immigrants successful at finding jobs in Canada: Survey

Immigrants successful at finding jobs in Canada: Survey
Immigrants who arrived in Canada over the past five years had an employment rate of 70.7 per cent, a higher rate than October 2019, pre-pandemic, the Labour Force Survey data 2022 released by Statistics Canada said.

Immigrants successful at finding jobs in Canada: Survey

Health ministers meeting in B.C. this week

Health ministers meeting in B.C. this week
The meeting comes after Canada's premiers met in Victoria last July, where they asked Ottawa to boost the Canada Health Transfer, the money each jurisdiction gets for health care, to 35 per cent, up from what they said amounts to 22 per cent.

Health ministers meeting in B.C. this week