London, Dec 25 : Thousands of jumbo squid have beached themselves on central
California shores this week, committing mass "suicide."
But despite
decades of study into the phenomenon in which the squid essentially fling
themselves onto shore, the cause of these mass beachings have been a
mystery.
But a few intriguing clues suggest poisonous algae that form
so-called red tides may be intoxicating the Humboldt squid and causing the
disoriented animals to swim ashore in Monterey Bay, said William Gilly, a marine
biologist at Stanford University's Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove,
Calif.
Each of the strandings has corresponded to a red tide, in which
algae bloom and release an extremely potent brain toxin, Gilly said. This fall,
the red tides have occurred every three weeks, around the same time as the squid
beachings, he said. (The squid have been stranding in large numbers for years,
with no known cause.)
"It's not exactly a smoking gun, but it's pretty
circumstantial evidence that there is some link," Gilly told LiveScience.
For decades, beach lovers have reported bizarre mass strandings where
throngs of Humboldt squid (Dosidicus gigas), also called jumbo squid, fling
themselves ashore, said Hannah Rosen, a marine biology doctoral candidate at the
Hopkins Marine Station.
"For some reason they just start swimming for the
beach," Rosen told LiveScience. "They'll asphyxiate because they're out of the
water too long. People have tried to throw them back in the water, and a lot of
times the squid will just head right back for the beach."
Before this,
scientists in 2002 and 2006 noticed mass squid strandings from the Gulf of
Mexico all the way to Alaska, Gilly said.
But the cause of the mass squid
deaths was an enigma. The strandings seem to happen whenever schools of squid
invade new territory, leading some to suggest the creatures simply get lost and
don't realize they are out of the water until it is too late. The squid washing
ashore are juvenile size, about 1 foot (0.3 meters) long, and hadn't been
traveled to Monterey Bay before this fall. This season's stranding, which
started Oct. 9, happened around the time Humboldt squid entered the
bay.
Other scientists have proposed that red tides that release a lethal
toxin called domoic acid may be intoxicating the squid and disorienting them.
But when researchers tested the stranded squid for domoic acid, they found only
trace amounts of the chemical, Gilly said.
The poisonous chemical mimics
a brain chemical called glutamate in mammals, though domoic acid is 10,000 times
more potent than glutamate. The similar structure means domoic acid can bind to
glutamate receptors on neurons. In turn, the receptor opens channels that let
calcium into the cell. At high levels the poison causes brain cells to go
haywire and fire like crazy, so much that they fill up with calcium, burst and
die, Gilly said.
Humans who eat shellfish contaminated with this
red-tide toxin get amnesic shellfish poisoning, because the toxin destroys their
brain's memory center called the hippocampus. Sea lions that eat similarly
poisoned anchovies or krill go into seizures or become disoriented and behave
bizarrely.
However, no one has tested the effects of lower levels of the
chemical on squid.
But new evidence points to the red tide as at
least one cause of the mass strandings. While most sea life follows daily tidal
or lunar cycles, the mass deaths seem to be happening every three weeks. That
led one of Gilly's graduate students, R. Russell Williams, to see if something
in the environment was leading them astray.
"He was fixated in finding
some kind of environmental signal," Gilly said.
Russell found that red
tides occurred every three weeks, around the same time as the squid strandings,
suggesting a link, Gilly said.
While past researchers have only found
trace levels of the toxic red-tide chemical in stranded squid, low doses of
domoic could essentially be making the squid drunk. Combined with navigating
unfamiliar waters, that could cause the mass die-offs.
"They could be
tipped over the edge by something like domoic acid that might cloud their
judgment," Gilly said.
This isn't the first time Gilly and his colleagues
have been led on a CSI-like hunt for Humboldt squid. In 2011, they figured out
why the elusive jumbo squid left their usual feeding grounds off the Baja
California coast in the winter of 2009 to 2010. Apparently, the squid had moved
north, following their prey, small, bioluminescent fish called lantern fish,
which had also moved north due to El NiƱo weather
patterns.
Ends
SA/EN
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Mystery of mass squid 'suicides' possibly solved
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