Regina Leader-Post

NEW SPECIES OF SEA CRITTERS PUSHED ACROSS PACIFIC BY 2011 TSUNAMI.

Nearly 300 species found in North America

- SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON • Nearly 300 species of fish, mussels and other sea critters hitchhiked across the Pacific Ocean on debris from the 2011 Japanese tsunami, washing ashore alive in the United States, researcher­s reported Thursday.

It is the largest and longest marine migration ever documented, outside experts and the researcher­s said. The scientists and colleagues combed the beaches of Washington, Oregon, California, British Columbia, Alaska and Hawaii and tracked the species to their Japanese origins. Their arrival could be a problem if the critters take root, pushing out native species, the study authors said in the journal Science.

“It’s a bit of what we call ecological roulette,” said lead author James Carlton, a marine sciences professor at Williams College, in Williamsto­wn, Mass.

It will be years before scientists know if the 289 Japanese species thrive in their new home and crowd out natives. The researcher­s roughly estimated that a million creatures travelled 7,725 kilometres across the Pacific Ocean to reach the West Coast, including hundreds of thousands of mussels.

Invasive species is a major problem worldwide with plants and animals thriving in areas where they don’t naturally live. Marine invasions in the past have hurt native farmed shellfish, eroded the local ecosystem, caused economic losses and spread disease-carrying species, said Bella Galil, a marine biologist with the Steinhardt Museum of Natural History in Tel Aviv, Israel, who wasn’t part of the study.

A Magnitude 9 earthquake off the coast of Japan triggered a tsunami on March 11, 2011, that swept boats, docks, buoys and other man-made materials into the Pacific. The debris drifted east with an armada of living creatures, some that gave birth to new generation­s while at sea.

“The diversity was somewhat jaw-dropping,” Carlton said. “Mollusks, sea anemones, corals, crabs, just a wide variety of species, really a cross-section of Japanese fauna.”

The researcher­s note another huge factor in this flotilla: plastics.

Most of the debris — buoys, boats, crates and pallets — are made of plastic and that survives, Carlton said. And so the hitchhiker­s survive, too.

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 ?? RUSS LEWIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Researcher John Chapman inspects a Japanese vessel that washed ashore on Long Beach, Wash., carrying numerous sea creatures with it.
RUSS LEWIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Researcher John Chapman inspects a Japanese vessel that washed ashore on Long Beach, Wash., carrying numerous sea creatures with it.

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