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B.C.’s kelp forests battle climate change, offer crucial environmental resources

Kelp forests, foundational to coastal ecosystems and B.C. Indigenous culture, are at risk
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Research is underway in order to help replenish diminishing kelp forests on the B.C. coast. Unsplash/contributed photo

By Alexandra Mehl, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter HA-SHILTH-SA

Thriving in cool water temperatures, kelp forests cover more than a quarter of the world’s coastlines.

According to the conservation group Ocean Wise, 40 to 60 per cent of these underwater gardens are in decline due to ocean warming and urchin overpopulation.

That threat is being felt in British Columbia which holds 25,725 kilometres of Canada’s 243,042-kilometre coastline.

“In the Pacific Northwest, kelp forests are a foundation species. Similar to salmon, they’re important for the health of the coastal ecosystem,” said Ocean Wise Seaforestation Project Coordinator Marissa Ng. “They’re also foundation species because they’re so abundant up and down the coast and much like forests on land, marine forests — kelp forest — they provide food and shelter for thousands of marine species.”

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA), the dense biodiversity within kelp forests form the basis for a rich ecosystem but that is threatened by marine grazers, such as sea urchins, when predators are lacking in the area.

The mere presence of predators discourages the foraging of a marine grazer.

Stevie Dennis is co-founder of Naas Foods, which sells organic kelp harvested in Clayoquot Sound on the west coast of Vancouver Island.

He noted that sea otters, which are a keystone species, were hunted nearly to the brink of extinction by the early 20th century. Lacking predation as a result, sea urchins overpopulated and destroyed kelp forests along the coast. When sea otters were reintroduced decades later, near Kyuquot, kelp forests came back.

The regrowth of kelp forests acted created a nursery and habitat for small fish such as herring, salmon, and rockfish, said Dennis.

“All these things have all been connected forever,” said Dennis.

Due to the cool water temperatures that kelp require for growth, the warming of ocean waters is also a significant threat to kelp forests, says NOAA.

Like above-ground forests, kelp presents a possibility to help change the trend of global warming.

“Kelp forests also have the potential to sequester significant amounts of carbon to potentially help mitigate the impacts of climate change,” said Ng. “However, I think there’s still a lot of research to be done to actually quantify that.”

Through the Seaforestation initiative, Ocean Wise recently announced the opening of a kelp nursery at the Pacific Science Enterprise Centre in West Vancouver.

The project aims to grow and restore kelp while also acting as a research hub by testing the plant’s seed production. By deploying seed, restoration efforts can be assessed, while providing community members opportunities to work and learn.

The kelp nursery will be set up outside in a tent with filtered seawater. Ocean Wise will be conducting a variety of tests with different variables that will help kelp grow, while also using what is grown in restoration projects, said Ng.

“At Ocean Wise, we’re working to restore kelp habitat for multiple reasons,” said Ng. “Kelp forests protect biodiversity. We also want to support coastal and Indigenous food security and livelihoods, and kelp forests also have the potential to sequester significant amounts of carbon to potentially help mitigate the impacts of climate change.”

Dennis, a member of Ahousaht First Nation, has spent his entire life working on the water. From surf instructor to the Canadian Coast Guard to fisherman, he’s always felt his livelihood was connected to the ocean.

“The connection towards myself and the traditional ways that people, let’s say, made a living around here, I just fell into suit. It’s what I do,” said Dennis.

“As I work within this industry, I learn more and more about how important kelp is. Kelp is a versatile tool that can be used for a lot of different things.”

He said that different types of kelp have been used for food and material, such as steaming fish, making rope and rattles. When war was approaching, nations would go to islands that were surrounded by kelp so that enemy canoes were unable to get to shore, said Dennis.

Naas Foods currently harvests wild kelp, though Dennis is in the final stages of getting approval for a kelp farm located in Ahousaht territory. With wild kelp, Dennis strictly follows harvesting regulations that contribute to sea kelp sustainability, he said, being careful to not cut too much of the plant and interfere with its growth, which can be 10 centimetres a day.

“It ticks all the boxes in putting your green foot forward,” said Dennis.

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