{"id":36780,"date":"2018-10-12T06:00:00","date_gmt":"2018-10-12T14:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/?p=36780"},"modified":"2018-10-12T06:00:00","modified_gmt":"2018-10-12T14:00:00","slug":"invasive-invertebrate-discovered-near-ketchikan","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/invasive-invertebrate-discovered-near-ketchikan\/","title":{"rendered":"Invasive invertebrate discovered near Ketchikan"},"content":{"rendered":"
They’re called sea lace, moss animals and Bugula neritina to scientists — and they’re not supposed to be here.<\/p>\n
But they are here, scientists say. The invasive species has been spotted in the southern reaches of coastal Alaska, a team of researchers has discovered.<\/p>\n
According to a study<\/a> published Sept. 27 in the academic journal Bioinvasions Records, the plant-like animal has been catalogued in Ketchikan for the first time ever. Invasive species, plants and animals that may move in to a geographic area where they aren’t indigenous, can sometimes wreak havoc on local ecosystems.<\/p>\n University of Alaska Fairbanks professor Gary Freitag, one of the study’s authors, said they don’t yet know how the sea lace will affect marine life around Ketchikan. There’s potential that it could do nothing, or it could outcompete native species for food or territory.<\/p>\n “We really don’t know the impacts of this,” Freitag said.<\/p>\n [Invasion from ‘Borg of the ocean’ baffles scientists<\/a>] <\/ins><\/p>\n The tiny organisms attach to hard surfaces like docks, rocks and the hulls of boats, forming colonies and filter-feeding off passing food particles.<\/p>\n The discovery comes from a year of analysis by a scientific team from the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Temple University and the UAF College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, where Freitag works as a marine advisor for the college’s Alaska Sea Grant.<\/p>\n The team suspended a series of small plastic plates around Ketchikan attached to bricks, Freitag said. Floating in the water column, the plates served as hosts to a smattering of sea species. The team then lab-analyzed the diversity of animals on the plates, providing them a picture of the different animals present near Ketchikan.<\/p>\n The team first encountered Bugula neritina in 2015 at Ketchikan’s Bar Harbor Marina, according to the paper.<\/p>\n The First City is the northern-most site for the study, which looked at biodiversity in marine waters in California, Panama and Mexico. The team wanted to find out how coastal marine life differs at different latitudes, Freitag said.<\/p>\n “There’s been a lot of theories as to whether diversity of organisms, the amount of organisms and the number of different species, varies with latitude in a region along the coastline. They were working out whether that theory is correct,” Freitag told the Empire in a Thursday phone interview.<\/p>\n The researchers don’t know why or how Bugula neritina moved north to Alaska. It could have arrived on the bottom of a passing vessel. Ketchikan is the first stop for foreign-flagged cruise ships and barges and fishing boats heading north.<\/p>\n Warming waters may be making the migration of invasive species easier, Freitag said. Several marine species new to Alaska, like market <\/a>squid<\/a>, are thought to have arrived here after chasing warmer waters north. Researchers believe Ketchikan is a bellwether for such migration.<\/p>\n The discovery is the northernmost record of Bugula neritina in the Pacific Ocean.<\/p>\n “I don’t know whether there’s any real, direct evidence that climate change is causing the spread of invasive species. It’s suspected very heavily, there’s indications that it plays a role,” Freitag said.<\/p>\n