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Interesting and scary if true article...
Interesting Times article...
> > Warming Waters and Dying Lobsters > > November 9, 2002 > By KIRK JOHNSON > > STONY BROOK, N.Y. - The first clue that something had once > again gone seriously wrong in Long Island Sound was the > color of the blood being spilled. Lobsters are not supposed > to bleed orange. > > But it was the timing that really piqued Alistair D. M. > Dove's interest. Orange-blooded lobsters began showing up > in his pathology lab here at the State University of New > York in mid-August, the very week researchers reported a > sudden increase in the Sound's water temperature after a > year of record-breaking warm weather. > > Through 20 subsequent autopsies, a pattern emerged. The > animals had been killed by a buildup of calcium, the rough > equivalent of kidney stones in humans, and all the evidence > pointed to one cause: water so warm that it was impairing > their ability to process minerals. The lobsters were dying > from the stress of an environment that had become hostile > to their ancient internal thermostats, Dr. Dove concluded. > > "The correlation is very strong," he said. "Not proven, > but strong. Climate is the killer here." > > Dr. Dove's words are cautious. There is, as he points out, > no airtight proof that warmer water is at the root of the > precipitous decline in Long Island Sound lobsters over the > last three years. Some researchers, along with many people > in the lobster fishing industry, still say that the main > culprits are pesticides, which were sprayed in the Sound's > watershed areas to combat mosquitoes bearing the West Nile > virus. > > But many scientists say Dr. Dove's work adds significant > weight to the argument that warmer waters caused by climate > change are the cause. If he is right, the implications are > ominous for the Sound's lobsters and lobster fishermen: > unlike pollution or pesticides, temperature is a problem > without an easy cure, or a villain to hold accountable. > > "If Long Island Sound is becoming inhospitable for lobsters > or other animals because water temperature is too high, > that means they're not going to stay there and there's > nothing anybody is going to do about it," said Gordon > Colvin, the director of marine resources for the New York > State Department of Environmental Conservation. > > Science has learned a lot about lobsters since a severe > die-off battered the Sound's lobster population in 1999. > > Altogether, 17 research projects are under way, including > the marine animal disease lab at Stony Brook that Dr. Dove, > a pathologist and senior research associate on assignment > from Cornell University, was hired this year to help > create. > > This invasion of lobster science is allowing researchers to > find calcium stones the size of sand grains (which, by the > way, do not pose any known threat to people who eat > lobsters), and it also enables them to see the broader > pattern. In 1999 and again this year, water temperatures at > the bottom of the Sound where lobsters live reached their > highest sustained levels of the last 10 years, researchers > said, surpassing the lobsters' so-called thermal limit of > about 69 degrees Fahrenheit. > > And in both years, rather the way fever signals the flu, > overly warm water was clearly associated with the onset of > disease. The immediate cause of death in 1999 is still > being investigated, but is believed to be a parasite called > paramoeba; this year it is a calcium buildup, called > calcinosis. Through whatever combination of problems, the > Sound's lobster harvest is off by 10 percent or more in > many fishing areas compared with last year. Dr. Dove and > other researchers have prepared a paper on this year's > problems for Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, a journal, and > are also working on a paper on the larger climate > connections. > > Other people say the warm-water explanation has been > bolstered by default because scientists looking into the > leading alternative theory for the 1999 disaster, pesticide > poisoning from the mosquito-spraying program, have so far > come up short in their search for proof. > > "There are researchers who are sure it was pesticide - and > the lobster fishermen are sure - but personally I now think > there's very little chance," said Jack Mattice, the > director of the New York Sea Grant Institute, which is > helping oversee the lobster research. "I believe that it > was primarily temperature, and I think most people would > probably say that temperature was a direct or indirect > cause." > > Other scientists insist that the 1999 mystery remains > unsolved. Long Island Sound, they say, has always been at > the temperature frontier for the American lobster, which > generally prefers the colder waters off New England. The > Sound's lobster population had also exploded to record > highs in the late 1990's, perhaps precipitating a natural > crash from heightened competition for food. An oxygen > deficiency in the water, called hypoxia, was severe that > year. > > As in some tangled mystery story, there is no shortage of > suspects. In the central and eastern sections of the Sound, > the lobster catch is still down as much as 60 percent, > compared with 1998. In the western end, where the > devastation was greatest, the lobster harvest is about > one-tenth what it was. > > Few scientists say that warmer water alone accounts for the > lobsters' decline, and some, including Dr. Dove, say that a > pesticide explanation for the 1999 die-off may still be > compatible with the warm water hypothesis. Stress from high > temperatures, they say, may suppress lobster immunity > systems, making them more susceptible to poisons or > diseases they could otherwise fight off. > > In an environmental impact study of West Nile spraying > programs, New York City's health department said last year > that pesticides applied just before a major storm could > produce crustacean deaths in the bays where rainwaters > drain. The 1999 lobster deaths occurred right after > Hurricane Floyd hit the region, and some scientists, along > with the lawyers representing a group of lobster fishermen > who are suing four pesticide companies, say that the timing > is too close to be coincidental. > > "They were able to withstand pollution in the past, and > this time they didn't," said Lance Stewart, an associate > extension professor at the University of Connecticut who > has studied the Sound's lobsters for more than 25 years and > who believes that pesticides played a role. > > Other people, including at least one of Dr. Stewart's > colleagues at the University of Connecticut, are looking at > the same set of facts and reaching a different conclusion > altogether. Richard French, an associate professor of > veterinary pathology, and one of the leading researchers > into the 1999 die-off, said he thought that pesticide > poisoning did not fit the geographic or timing pattern of > the lobster deaths in 1999. High water temperatures, he > said, do fit the facts. > > "When temperatures are elevated a lot of other things > change; there's also growth in algae, and that depletes > oxygen on the ocean floor, and that brings in hydrogen > sulfides and other ions into the water, and changes the > whole chemistry," he said. "When everything is lined up, > disease breaks." > > Lobster fishermen say the main characteristic of the 1999 > die-off was its suddenness. This year, despite a supposedly > similar pattern, they say, the problem has been incremental > and chronic. > > "We just want our fishery back, but it doesn't appear we're > going to get it back," said Nick Crismale, the president of > the Connecticut Commercial Lobstermen's Association. Mr. > Crismale is also a plaintiff in the pesticide industry > lawsuit. "Seems to me the only people making out on this > are the researchers," he added. "The researchers get the > grants, and the lobstermen get nothing." > > Back in the lab, Dr. Dove said he had still not been able > to figure out the exact connection between the calcium > stones and the altered color of the lobsters' blood. Pale > pink, clear or even green can be normal for lobsters > depending on the time of year and the sex of the animal. > Orange remains a mystery. |
lobsters with kidney stones.... poor things:(
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If my blood changed color i would definitly say there was a problem
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yup
same here
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