Why the Sunflower Star?
Sunflower Stars are a Key Pillar of Kelp Forest Life
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Sunflower Stars Prey on Urchins
Purple urchins are one of sunflower stars’ main source of prey. In a healthy kelp forest ecosystem, sunflower stars can help regulate urchin populations, preventing urchin overgrazing. Even the presence of a sunflower star may prevent urchin incursion into the kelp forest, because when they encounter a predator, urchins initiate escape behavior and send chemical signals alerting others nearby.
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Urchin Overgrazing Decimates Kelp Forests
When kelp is plentiful, urchins passively graze on drift kelp and live mostly in rock crevices. When kelp is scarce, purple urchins change their behavior to active foraging, becoming generalist foragers using their strong jaws to scrape any and all algae and invertebrates off the rock. More than 96% of Northern California’s kelp forests have disappeared in the last 10 years, in large part due to urchin overgrazing.
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Kelp Forests Benefit Humanity & the Planet
Kelp forests are the home of many species that depend on them for survival. They are shelters and hunting grounds for otters, sea lions, fish, seabirds, and occasionally whales. They feed abalone, juvenile smelt and herring, and other commercially important species. They capture carbon, delight divers, and attract residents and tourists to the Pacific Coast.