Yes, extreme heat influenced by climate change is killing sea life

The heat dome in the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia is the latest example of an extreme heat event leading to the deaths of marine animals.
Credit: AP Photo/Martin Meissner
Mussels pile up on a dry river bank of Germany's most important river Rhine in front of the Cathedral in Cologne, Germany, after a long time of drought, Monday, April 27, 2020.

Heat is the leading weather-related killer in the United States. In the Pacific Northwest, a late June heat wave, caused by a weather phenomenon called a heat dome, in which the atmosphere traps hot ocean air, led to the deaths of hundreds of people. Temperatures over 115 degrees were reported in Washington and Oregon. A new record-high temperature in Canada was reached in Lytton, a small town in British Columbia, which got up to 121 degrees. The town was soon after destroyed by a wildfire.

But itโ€™s not just humans who are affected by extreme heat. In the days after the Pacific Northwest heat dome, people attributed the extreme weather event to the deaths of marine animals. That included U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders. Others said the heat dome led to the deaths of 1 billion sea creatures.

THE QUESTION

Is extreme heat killing sea life?

THE SOURCES

THE ANSWER

This is true.

Yes, experts have attributed the deaths of sea life to extreme heat events influenced by climate change.

WHAT WE FOUND

Christopher Harley, a professor with the Department of Zoology at the University of British Columbia, said based on his past work, he knew a heat wave like the one that recently hit British Columbia could create dangerous conditions for living things. So, he walked down to the Vancouver, B.C., coast to assess what impact the heat dome had on sea creatures.

โ€œI could smell it before I even got there,โ€ Harley said of the mass deaths.

Once he got to the shore, Harleyโ€™s eyes confirmed what his other senses were telling him.

โ€œThe number of dead animals and mussels stretched on and on,โ€ he said.

In addition to mussels, Harley said clams, oysters and sea stars were among the dead sea creatures. He initially estimated more than 1 billion sea creatures died as a result of the heat wave. As heโ€™s further investigated the impact of the heat dome, Harley believes his initial death count estimate was low.

โ€œThe numbers almost lose meaning when theyโ€™re this big,โ€ he said.

Ken Fong with Canadaโ€™s department of fisheries and oceans told VERIFY the agency is aware the heat wave may have killed a large number of seashore animals, but that it was too soon to estimate how many died.

More than 20 scientists with World Weather Attribution, a collaboration of climate scientists throughout the world, concluded the extreme heat wave โ€œwas virtually impossible without human-caused climate change.โ€

โ€œThe observed temperatures were so extreme that they lie far outside the range of historically observed temperatures,โ€ the report from World Weather Attribution says. โ€œThis makes it hard to quantify with confidence how rare the event was. In the most realistic statistical analysis, the event is estimated to be about a 1 in 1,000-year event in todayโ€™s climate.โ€

In a statement on the World Meteorological Organizationโ€™s website, a climate scientist with the United Kingdomโ€™s national weather service said: โ€œWithout human-induced climate change, it would have been almost impossible to hit such record-breaking mean June temperatures in the Western United States as the chances of natural occurrence is once every tens of thousands of yearsโ€ฆHuman influence is estimated to have increased the likelihood of a new record several thousand times.โ€

In its 2020 state of global climate report, the World Meteorological Organization determined the global mean temperature was 1.2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

The United Nationsโ€™ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) also attributes human activity to warming oceans.  

โ€œThe ocean has taken up between 20 to 30% of human-induced carbon dioxide emissions since the 1980s, causing ocean acidification,โ€ the IPCC said in a 2019 report. โ€œTo date, the ocean has taken up more than 90% of the excess heat in the climate system.โ€

Data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows the ocean surface temperature has risen for decades. That warming is having an impact on sea life, according to the IPCC.

โ€œOcean warming and acidification, loss of oxygen and changes in nutrient supplies, are already affecting the distribution and abundance of marine life in coastal areas, in the open ocean and at the sea floor,โ€ the IPCC report says.

The report also notes marine heat waves have doubled in frequency since 1982 and are becoming more intense.

A massive marine heat wave known as โ€œThe Blobโ€ engulfed the Pacific Ocean along the West Coast from 2013-2017. NOAA Fisheries says โ€œThe Blobโ€ raised sea surface temperatures by as much as 7 degrees Fahrenheit above average. That warming had consequences for sea life.

โ€œIn 2015 a record outbreak of toxic algae shut down West Coast Dungeness crab fisheries worth millions of dollars,โ€ NOAA Fisheries said. โ€œThen came seabird die-offs, record numbers of whales entangled in fishing lines, crashing salmon returns, and starving California sea lion pups washing up on beaches, just for starters.โ€

A study published in the Public Library of Science estimates about 1 million common murres, a seabird of the North Pacific, died of starvation between the summer of 2015 and spring 2016. Researchers linked the seabird die-off to โ€œThe Blob.โ€

Fong said Canadaโ€™s department of fisheries and oceans has observed marine heat waves more frequently since 2014.

Harley said past heat waves heโ€™s observed were not as impactful on sea life as the recent heat dome that cooked the U.S. Pacific Northwest and British Columbia.

โ€œThose were not nearly as extensive and not nearly as many species were affected,โ€ he said. 

More from VERIFY: Yes, heat is historically the top weather-related killer in the US

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