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Summer Cometh: Are you ready? |
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Oregon
Beaches Aglow with Freaky Critters
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| Look for dark beaches at night, including
caves like this at Hug Point |
(Oregon Coast)
– The word is getting out about this interesting and rare
phenomenon: “glowing sands” is being spotted all over
the Oregon coast this summer.
BeachConnection.net first
gave it major attention about two weeks ago, spotting it in Newport,
Arch Cape, Cannon Beach and then Nehalem Bay. Those sightings, in
turn, got attention in other local papers on the coast - and thus
the buzz has begun.
The key is a tiny, microscopic
creature called a dinoflagellate. They are essentially tiny plants
– a form of phytoplankton, which, like all phytoplankton,
are the base of the ocean’s food chain.
During the last
four weeks, they’ve been spotted on and off on Oregon’s
beaches, giving off a faint bluish green and brief spark when stepped
on or if you kick the sand around.
They vary in
intensity and effect. One night in July in Arch Cape, they yielded
enormous showers of them when the sand was disturbed. Two nights
later in the same spot, they were much less prominent. Rockaway
resident Abby Olson, who saw them in Arch Cape that night, said
she scuffed her foot on the sand in one spot and a three inch-long
section of sand continued glowing, albeit faintly, looking like
a glow stick.
They were also spotted
in Newport’s Nye Beach, although very faint in most spots,
making them hard to see.
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| At
Nehalem Bay, they create an eerie glowing trail behind your
hand |
In Manzanita,
BeachConnection.net staff saw them twinkling in the water of receding
waves, as waves heading backwards kicked up the sand they were embedded
in.
They are also sometimes
seen in pools of standing water further up the beach from the tide
line, where they will often look like small galaxies that briefly
explode into existence.
In bays, like
Nehalem Bay, they give off an eerie, blue, glowing trail as you
move your hand around in the water. Locals there who go swimming
in these waters during the proliferation of dinoflagellates say
it “makes your body look like a glowing skeleton.”
It’s an
awesome sight, one that sends squeals of joy and surprise out of
those who see it for the first time.
Rachel Thompson,
a Nehalem resident and publisher of website registerlocally.com,
was introduced to the phenomenon by BeachConnection.net editor Andre’
Hagestedt. “That was so cool about the beach glow,”
she said. “I had so much fun. I went out a couple days later
and it wasn't as strong of a glow. Still pretty amazing though.”
The occurrence of dinoflagellate
blooms coincides with certain weather and oceanic conditions, which
tend to happen more often in the summer. It is slightly rare here
on this coast, as Oregon’s climate doesn’t allow them
as much as warmer places like California. In Puerto Rico, there
are numerous bays that are famous for containing a lot of the tiny
critters, creating glowing bays.
Here, they change
and shift with the winds and currents, making them even more rare.
They can appear one night, and then not appear again for months.
And then they don’t live in the sand more than a day.
Locals on the north coast
have called it “star stompin’,” while most incorrectly
refer to the phenomenon as “phosphorescent sand.” These
creatures are more like fireflies and are bioluminescent, meaning
they give off light through their own body chemistry, whereas phosphorescence
is a chemical reaction by itself, created by nonliving elements
of nature, having nothing to do with living organisms.
These critters off our
coast are reliant on sunlight for their glow, said Tiffany Boothe,
of the Seaside Aquarium.
“Many dinoflagellates
are photosynthetic and play a key role as producers in the food
chains of the ocean,” Boothe said. “The luminescence
of photosynthetic dinoflagellates is very much influenced by the
intensity of the previous day’s sunlight. The brighter the
sunlight, the brighter the luminescence will be. Bioluminescence
in dinoflagellates reaches its maximum levels two hours into darkness.”
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| Boothe
tries to photograph the glowing sands |
“Dinoflagellates
are the most common source of bioluminescence and are also known
as Pyrrophyta - or fire plants,” Boothe said. “Dinoflagellates
are unicellular and are usually planktonic. 90 percent are marine
plankton. They are microscopic and mobile. They swim by two flagella,
which are movable protein strands.”
It’s a
warmer than usual summer in many ways, which can cause weather conditions
on the oceans that create “upwellings” – the upsurge
of colder waters from the deep that bring the nutrients and thus
make for larger blooms of dinoflagellates.
Boothe said
that ironically, it’s the colder waters that bring out more
of the glowing beasties. “The colder waters from the deep
cause the blooms, because they bring the nutrients the dinoflagellates
live on, making them reproduce in huge numbers.”
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Jim Burke, Director
of Animal Husbandry at the Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport, described
it further.
“This time of year
there are upwelling events that bring nutrient rich waters to the
surface,” said Burke. “These waters are then the cause
of plankton blooms. These plankton blooms consist of many microorganisms,
many of which include the bioluminescent dinoflagellates. When these
dinoflagellates are agitated, a chemical reaction takes place that
releases light.”
He said warm summers
like this one create north winds, which then bring the upwellings.
Burke said he didn’t
know the biological reason for dinoflagellates being bioluminescent,
but said that the reason larger creatures like some jellyfish give
off such a glow is so they can attract prey.
The luminescence of a
single dinoflagellate lasts for 0.1 seconds, which is why photographing
the phenomenon is so next to impossible. Larger organisms, such
as jellyfish, can be luminescent for tens of seconds.
Boothe tried
to photograph them in early August in Gearhart, but to no avail.
She and two friends grabbed jars and poured wet sand that had the
dinoflagellates into jars. They then tried shaking the jars. But
the flashes happen too fast for a long exposure to catch –
and a long exposure is what it would take to catch such a faint
glow.
“Bioluminescence
is the light produced by a chemical reaction that occurs in an organism,”
said Boothe. “It occurs at all depths in the ocean, but is
most commonly observed at the surface. Bioluminescence is the only
source of light in the deep ocean where sunlight does not penetrate.”
Boothe said bioluminescence
in sea creatures is blue for two reasons. One, blue/green light
travels the farthest in water. “Its wavelength is between
440 to 479 nm, which is mid-range in the spectrum of colors,”
Boothe said. “And the second reason is that most organisms
are sensitive to only blue light. They do not have the ability to
absorb the longer or shorter wavelengths of other lights such as
red.”
Chances are decent you’ll
see it at least one more time in summer, but fall’s “second
summer” on the coast often brings it in greater numbers. This
is when conditions on the coast are at their warmest, happening
September and early October.
They have also
been seen glowing a faint blue on waves that hit rocks in the night.
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