Ocean Sunfish (Image: JoshBerglund19) |
“What’s crazy is, like a day before, a guy asked me what was the strangest thing I’d brought up in a trawl,” says Orsi.
Whatever he answered then—sea otter, Dall’s porpoise, maybe a blue shark—is certainly obsolete now.
Strange things are aswim along the Pacific coast. Starving sea lion pups, jellyfish swarms, toxic algae blooms. All because of an enormous mass of warm water stretching from California to Alaska that scientists have dubbed 'the Blob.'
And the Blob is about to get joined by more warm water from the gargantuan El Niño—with its own scientific nickname, 'Godzilla'—forming in the equatorial east Pacific. When these monster warm water systems eventually meet, they aren’t just going to bring charming equatorial fish on subarctic vacations. They’re probably going to deliver a generation (or several generations) of scrawny fish to the oceans.
Read the full article HERE.
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