Strong winds might have blown sea cucumbers (Cucumaria miniata) up on to the beach, exposing them to the cold at low tide.
A large group of dead northern sea nettles (Chrysaora melanaster) found near the shore in Kasitsna Bay.
We did not see a single sea star in the Kachemak-side tide pools, and boulders we visit each year all looked a little vacant, with a lot of empty, critter-free space.
Sea Nettle (Chrysaora melanaster) jellyfish washed up on the beach.
Squid are becoming more common on the shoreline over the past few years.
Sea Star Wasting Disease has caused sea stars to die off since 2013. As of 2018, there are still no sea stars on Bishops Beach in Homer.
Sea star wasting syndrome, or disease as it has become known, hit Kachemak Bay hard in 2016, killing about 90 percent of sunflower and true star populations.
Tube-Dwelling Worms on Seldovia Beach
Squid are occasionally found in the area, but not very often.
Sea star wasting disease, a type of densovirus, reduced the count of sea stars in Kachemak Bay from 180 last spring to a measly five this year.
No one really knows why algae put so much effort into making poisons. Alexandrium makes saxitoxin, and causes PSP. Another algae called Pseudo-nitzschia produces domoic acid, the source of amnesiac shellfish poisoning.
Sea star wasting syndrome was first documented in Kachemak Bay in 2014, but it wasn’t until last summer that the mysterious infection began killing sea stars in large numbers.
Kachemak Bay has witnessed massive die-offs of sea stars, murres and razor clams. Whats going on?
Washing ashore from Kachemak Bay
Blue Sail Jellyfish
Near MacDonald Spit, southern end of the Kenai Peninsula.
These ladies found a snail that they had never seen before and brought them.
7-29-14 Crab larvae wash ashore - Port Graham, Alaska, USA
7-3-12 Barnacle decline - McDonald Spit, Alaska, USA
3-9-12 Barnacles declining - Nanwalek, Alaska, USA
All Topics
All Countries
Any Date
Apply