MY AMERICAN SCIENTIST
 
  GO! SIGN UP!
SEARCH
  RSS
Logo

FEATURE ARTICLE

The Decline of the Blue Crab

Changing weather patterns and a suffocating parasite may have reduced the numbers of this species along the Eastern seaboard

Richard Lee, Marc Frischer

Life cycle of Hematodinium
Click to Enlarge Image

The blue crab, which is harvested by the millions every year, supports an important fishery along the Eastern and Gulf coasts of the United States. However, a recent crash in the blue crab population has devastated the commercial crab industry. The cause of this dramatic crash is now the subject of an intense investigation by ecologists and fishery scientists. There are hints that weather–related changes may be responsible. There is also evidence that a parasitic disease in blue crabs has become both more prevalent and more severe. Marine biologists Richard Lee and Marc Frischer have been studying these events along the coast of southeastern Georgia, a region that has been especially hard hit, to see whether the two phenomena might be related.


 Go to Article

 

EMAIL TO A FRIEND :

Of Possible Interest

Letters to the Editors: Enlightening Work

Science Observer: What's All the Flap About?

Science Observer: In the News

 

Related Internet Resources

Richard F. Lee's Page

Diseases of Aquatic Organisms

Blue Crab Education Page

Hematodinium Research