San Francisco Chronicle

Bodega lab a key part of effort to save abalone

Many of state’s species on brink of extinction

- By Tara Duggan

April used to be the beginning of abalone diving season, when Bay Area families would head up the SonomaMend­ocino coast to harvest the creatures, whose delicate flavor seems to capture all the mysteries of the sea.

The gigantic mollusk has turned out to be too delicious for its own good. Overfishin­g and disease led to the collapse of many abalone population­s in the 20th century, and a series of environmen­tal catastroph­es led the state to ban recreation­al diving for red abalone in 2018, a moratorium recently extended to 2026.

But researcher­s are working on restoring native abalone species that once filled the state’s tide pools and littered its beaches with huge mother-of-pearl shells. The center of that research is in the Bay Area, at the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory in Bodega Bay. There scientists have been

breeding endangered white abalones so they can be reintroduc­ed to their native Southern California and are researchin­g how both native and farmed abalone may adapt to the ocean acidificat­ion that comes with climate change.

“The cultural and economic and ecological importance of abalone can’t be overstated,” said Kristin Aquilino, who heads the lab’s white abalone project. “Overfishin­g is what caused white abalone to be on the brink of extinction. So I think that we have a responsibi­lity to fix that.”

Aquilino jokingly refers to the lab as an abalone fertility clinic, where researcher Sara Boles is pioneering techniques to use ultrasound equipment designed for human breast exams to divine the gastropods’ reproducti­ve readiness, which happens in the spring.

“.redicting when they’re ready to reproduce — that’s the holy grail,” said Daniel Swezey, another project scientist at the lab.

Seven abalone species inhabit the California coast, suctioned to rocks with a muscular foot, their tentacles quivering like a fringed skirt under oval shells. They have been a source of food for native people for more than 10,000 years and became part of a commercial fishery in the old Rush era.

In addition to the white and red species, black, pink and green abalones were also commercial­ly fished ºtwo other native species, pinto and flat abalones, were not». Overharves­ting caused their population­s to collapse starting in the mid20th century, leading to the end of all commercial fishing by 1¥¥Ø. By then, all that was left was the recreation­al fishery for red abalone north of the olden ate. While scientists estimate that each species of abalone in California once numbered in the millions, the legal catch of red abalone dropped to about 240,000 annually in its last few years.

The closure of that last fishery in 2018, which cut off an estimated l1~ million to l2~ million spent annually at businesses frequented by abalone divers, according to the Fish and ame Commission, was in response to environmen­tal disruption.

Most current threats to abalones are climaterel­ated: Marine heat waves are partly responsibl­e for the near disappeara­nce of the kelp forest on the North Coast, the red abalone’s food source. An explosion of purple sea urchin, which devoured the remaining kelp, was another factor.

In recent months, the endangered black abalone became an unwitting victim of last year’s Dolan Fire, when resulting mudslides on the Big Sur coast buried thousands of them, biologists embarked on a huge rescue effort. They packed up survivors in coolers and transferre­d them to a makeshift rehab facility, where they’re staying until it’s safe to return them to the Big Sur coast.

Abalones are found on almost every continent, and worldwide their biggest looming threat from climate change is ocean acidificat­ion, which happens as the ocean absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The lowerpH water makes it difficult for them to grow hard shells.

In the lab, Swezey and Boles created the ocean acidificat­ion conditions expected to exist in 10 to 20 years to see how both farmed and wild red abalone from the Mendocino coast will fare. In a study published last fall, they found that the wild ones survived better because they’ve already been conditione­d by the more acidic water that comes from marine upwelling in their area.

Swezey, also a scientist at a commercial abalone farm near Santa Barbara, said future restoratio­n efforts will have to focus on which animals are the hardiest and what enables them to tolerate acidificat­ion.

Coaxing abalone to reproduce in the wild or in a lab is not easy. In the ocean, the giant marine snails aren’t very prolific when their numbers drop and they become less densely populated. Males and females do what’s called broadcast spawning, sending their eggs and sperm out into the water, and need to be within a few meters of each other.

In the lab or at abalone farms, humans must try to first create the right conditions for abalones to become reproducti­ve, through diet, water temperatur­e and light, and then have to predict when the males and females are ready to spawn. Aquilino was disappoint­ed last month when none of the two dozen animals she thought were ready spawned.

“It happens from time to time that they don’t cooperate,” she said. “Maybe they were feeling the pandemic stress.” They’ll give it another go later this month.

Captive breeding of white abalone began in 2001, when it became the first marine invertebra­te to receive endangered species status. Scientists at the Channel Islands Marine Resource Institute bred over 100,000 juveniles, but most perished from a disease called withering syndrome.

Recovery efforts moved to Bodega Lab in 2011, which now breeds about 20,000 juveniles a year. The goal is to increase to 100,000, Aquilino said.

Last year, they introduced 1,000 captivebre­d abalone in Southern California. They won’t know how successful they were for three to five years, when they grow larger.

Figuring out the best spots for introducin­g abalone is an area that Todd Braje, a professor of anthropolo­gy at San Diego State University also affiliated with the California Academy of Sciences, researches from a historical perspectiv­e.

Braje studied archaeolog­ical shell middens, or abalone trash piles up to 12,000 years old left behind by the Chumash tribe and their ancestors, on the northern Channel Islands, for a study he published in 201¥. After determinin­g where abalone fishing was most intensive based on the location of middens, he compared that to maps of the most popular commercial fishing grounds from the 1¥th and 20th century.

He found three specific locations where people from each era fished for abalone, which led to a surprising­ly upbeat conclusion — that they’d also make the best places to start bringing back black abalone because historical­ly that’s where the species was most abundant.

“Through those 10,000 years there’s been tremendous changes in climate, along with other pressures like fishing. Black abalones seemed to do well through all of that,” he said, even though that’s where they were fished the most. “Let’s start reseeding in these spots first, because they seem to be the most resilient.”

It’s a small sign of hope for the state’s beloved giant sea snail, after all it’s been through.

 ?? Stephen Lam / The Chronicle ?? UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory scientist Daniel Swezey holds a wild red abalone, a species that is disappeari­ng from California’s coastal waters.
Stephen Lam / The Chronicle UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory scientist Daniel Swezey holds a wild red abalone, a species that is disappeari­ng from California’s coastal waters.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States