David Johnson was standing in a salt marsh on the northern Massachusetts coast when he saw a fiddler crab,
Johnson hypothesizes that warmer ocean temperatures in 2012 and 2013, which were 1.3°C higher than the previous decade's average, allowed the crabs to move north. "Climate change is lowering the thermal barriers that kept species from moving toward the poles," he says. Johnson's paper documents the rapid movement of a warm-water species in the typically cold Gulf of Maine.
"When I first saw the crab, I thought, 'You're not supposed to be here,'" Johnson says. After the initial discovery, Johnson found the crabs as far north as Hampton, New Hampshire.
"In terms of climate science, the question used to be, is the climate changing? The answer is a resounding yes. The next question is, 'How will organisms respond?' We are now seeing that one way is by changes in where they are found," Johnson says.
"As the world's oceans continue to warm, we will continue to see climate-driven range expansions," he predicts. "The next question for scientists is, 'What is the impact of these new species on the ecosystems they move into?'"
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