Marine biologist Brent Hughes didn't think sea otters and sea grass had much in common. But his research at Elkhorn Slough, an estuary on Monterey Bay in northern California, revealed a new and surprising connection between the two. The scientist expected this estuary to be overrun with algae due to the fertilizer runoff from surrounding fields. But it wasn't. Brett's answer: sea otters. The otters eat crabs, which prey on sea hares, a type of mollusk. Fewer crabs mean more sea hares. The sea hares consume algae, thereby allowing sea grass to thrive. This set of relationships within a food chain is known as a trophic cascade.
Colour Photographs, Table of Contents, Further Reading, Glossary, Index, Maps, Web Sites
Book Title | ISBN # | Copyright | CDN List | Disc. % | Disc. Price | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sea Otter Heroes: The Predators That Saved an Ecosystem | 9781512426311 | 2017 | $37.50 | 20% | $30.00 | Will Ship 4-6 Wks |
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