ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2024-12-17 10:06 pm

Sea Otters

Scientists celebrate as sea otters devour invasive creatures: 'This is one of the first pieces of good news we’ve gotten'

Sea otters are making great strides toward recovery in California, and new research shows that their growing numbers are directly correlated with the decline of one of the most invasive species in the marine world: the dreaded green crab.


[---8<---]
The research team estimated that sea otters local to the region eat 120,000 green crabs a year.

It’s an essential job, given that green crabs are aggressive predators that habitually outcompete native species and decimate fields of seagrass.
[---8<---]
To stay warm and well-fed in freezing waters, sea otters eat nearly a quarter of their body weight in food every day — and their diet is not just limited to crabs. Sea otters also snack on sea snails, clams, mussels, fish, and sea urchins.

The last item on the menu is especially important, as sea urchins are densely overpopulated and capable of destroying entire kelp forests — carbon-capturing canopies that are vital to ocean health
.


This is indeed one of the few pieces of good news I've heard about the environment. Yay, otters!


These are some organizations that support sea otters. Donate and/or volunteer here to help sea otters and reduce both green crabs and sea urchins.

The Otter Project

Sea Otter Foundation & Trust

Sea Otter Recovery Fund
 

goatgodschild: (Default)

Re: Yay

[personal profile] goatgodschild 2024-12-18 07:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Suggested reading: Tarka the Otter (1927). More naturalistic than Grahame, but useful for period knowledge of river otter life, with a similar audience.
daryl_wor: tie dye and spiky bat (Default)

Re: Yay

[personal profile] daryl_wor 2024-12-18 07:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow, thanks! Goodie, public domain.(Presumably)