Endangered sea otters are returning to California, slowing marshland erosion

Sea otter populations were slashed by the 19th century fur trade

The return of sea otters and their voracious appetites has helped rescue a section of California marshland, a new study shows.

Sea otters eat constantly and one of their favorite snacks is the striped shore crab. These crabs dig burrows and also nibble away roots of the marsh grass pickleweed that holds dirt in place.

Left unchecked, the crabs turn the marsh banks "into Swiss cheese," which can collapse when big waves or storms hit, said Brent Hughes, a Sonoma State University marine ecologist and co-author of the new study published Wednesday in the journal Nature.

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Researchers found that the return of the crab-eating sea otters to a tidal estuary near Monterey, California, helped curb erosion.

"They don’t completely reverse erosion, but slow it down to natural levels," said Hughes.

For many years, there weren't any sea otters in Elkhorn Slough.

A sea otter holding a piece of vegetation floats in Monterey Bay, CA, on May 19, 2019. Conservation efforts are helping sea otter population levels in the area to bounce back from near extinction, and their return to the California marshland has helped to control the number of burrowing crabs that cause marshland erosion. (Emma Levy via AP)

The 19th century fur trade decimated their global population which once stretched from Alaska to California, as well as into Russia and Japan. At one point, as few as 2,000 animals remained, mostly in Alaska.

Hunting bans and habitat restoration efforts helped sea otters recover some of their former range. The first returnees were spotted in Elkhorn Slough in 1984. The Monterey Bay Aquarium's program for raising and releasing orphaned sea otters also boosted the estuary's population.

For the new study, researchers analyzed historic erosion rates dating back to the 1930s to assess the impact of sea otters' return. They also set up fenced areas to keep otters away from some creek sections for three years — those creek banks eroded much faster.

Past studies about the return of top predators to various habitats — most famously, the reintroduction of gray wolves to Yellowstone National Park — show how such species maintain ecosystem stability. Wolves curbed the number of elk and moose that ate saplings and slowed riverbank erosion.

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Many past studies relied on observations, but the design of the latest research left no doubt as to the sea otters' impact, said Johan Eklöf, a Stockholm University marine biologist who was not involved in the new study.

Other research has shown that sea otters help kelp forests regrow by controlling the number of sea urchins that munch kelp.

Sea otters "are amazing finders and eaters," said Brian Silliman, a Duke University coastal ecologist and co-author of the latest study.

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