I've been to Morro Bay and saw otters raising babies. So precious. We can't afford to let them go.
@TheFabledSCP70002 ай бұрын
You should see what they do to make those babies
@nannerz19942 ай бұрын
I'm from the Midwest and live in LA yeah I'm seeing Leo career State Park and I've been to Morro Bay but I haven't been to Monterey Bay and really that's all I want to do I want to snorkel and learn how to kayak and swim and take photos and it's literally all I want. I don't know if the Pacific serve learner goes up and down and stops at stops from Burbank to Monterey Bay but if it does I would like to take it.
@hgardz2 ай бұрын
But we need to think of all animals and wildlife like this.
@nataliemcgovern3087Ай бұрын
I live in Morro Bay, the sea otter population is thriving finally! I was born in SLO County and couldn't be happier. There is an abalone farm 25 minutes north of Morro Bay. The kelp forests are amazing! Due to a lot of activism, let's all do our part please!
@contrafax2 ай бұрын
Also kelp is a huge help reducing coastal erosion. They had a similar problem in the island chains of Alaska. Besides the erosion the fish population was very low. The busted butt, brought the otter back and the forests started growing and the fish rebounded.
@shihtzusrule91152 ай бұрын
They detonated a nuclear bomb up there. They relocated some of the otters before they set it off. the urchins killed the kelp there, too, and they started to reintroduce them to try and bring the ecosystem back.
@contrafax2 ай бұрын
@@shihtzusrule9115 ahh, I didn't remember why that ecosystem was screwed up.
@sebastianhoppe2118Ай бұрын
Have you ever noticed that all of the people that are trying save the world and the nature are so beautiful. In and out
@Hansulf2 ай бұрын
My heart is broken at hearing that 96% of the kelp forest from the California coast has been lost 😢
@rypatmackrock2 ай бұрын
And that is why the work of the Monterey Bay aquarium helping the sea otters is that much more important let alone larger re-introductions. Aside from what needs to be done, see otters should definitely be a California icon for their importance.
@sharonloomis52642 ай бұрын
We also harvest kelp for food. I eat kelp for the Iodine. I am allergic to Iodine and every so often I buy kelp. Not that much or I break out. According to the book of Revelation, God is going to recreate Earth. Hoping no more allergies.
@1st1anarkissed2 ай бұрын
Haida gwaii has been released back into the hands of its traditional caretakers. There are many otters and kelp forests there still and now perhaps they too will spread.
@scraller2 ай бұрын
Southern sea otters (the ones in the video) are only found in California. There are two other subspecies of sea otter - Northern sea otters (range from Washington coast up through Alaska) and Russian sea otters (their range is Russia down to Japan) Those populations are larger, in the thousands - but Southern sea otters in the wild are only around 3,000. And their range is limited - mostly central California. They have rebounded from almost being wiped out from the fur trade of the 18th-19th centuries, but it took a long time, plus federal protections like the Marine Mammal Protection Act and the Endangered Species Act made a big difference. But their population is still fragile and anything like an oil spill or disease could wipe them out.
@rypatmackrock2 ай бұрын
@@scraller and that is what makes the Monterey Bay aquarium’s work that much more important. I got to see the sea otters last memorial Day weekend with my family visiting the area.
@CJ-nf5jd2 ай бұрын
Kudos to all the conservationists, scientists and many others helping to restore the funtion of this planet. More and more people now realize the damage cause by human greed which is still ongoing and working to reverse the damage
@stephaniedouglasaviewfroma95962 ай бұрын
@Joe Hanson - your presentation of the relationships between kelp, sea urchins and otters 🦦- was fabulous. I love the optimistic joy in your description. I’m more fatalistic and pessimistic- and, still hold a small ember of hope for meaningful change during my grandkids lifetimes.
@poabott2 ай бұрын
Honestly crazy how perfectly Otters evolved to trigger our sense of cuteness. like dogs did it on purpose but otters? pure coincidence
@mxandrew2 ай бұрын
i feel the same way about harbor (and other) seals
@laura-ann.07262 ай бұрын
When I was in my early 30's, I got my PADI certification, and over the next few years, did many dives in kelp forests along the central coast from Big Sur to Fort Bragg. On a day with good visibility, those kelp dives were among the most amazing I ever did.
@wombatkins2 ай бұрын
Ive been there! Seeing otters living their best life is great
@bryan52132 ай бұрын
That's so heartbreaking to hear how much Kelp forest we've lost. 😢 I really hope the west coast steps up their efforts.
@shihtzusrule91152 ай бұрын
would you be willing to pay a tax to try and correct what humans have damaged over the years and restore the ecosystems? would you vote for politicians who made something like this an issue? Not just focus on the stock market, economy and immigration?
@scottabc722 ай бұрын
@@shihtzusrule9115 Yes if those same politicians did something to help redistribute wealth away from the rich back to working people
@catc89272 ай бұрын
One of the causes people can donate to on the California state tax return is a sea otter restoration fund. There’s also a sea otter California DMV vanity plate.
@SonnyDarvish2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the efforts for reviving them back.
@nataliemcgovern3087Ай бұрын
I was born in SLO and been here my whole life. Otters are everywhere in Morro Bay. Wasn't that way when i was growing up. Go conservation!!
@TotalRADandMORE2 ай бұрын
I love exploring these underwater forests. Such a cool video!!
@sumirsookdeo94432 ай бұрын
They gotta step up now. These otters need to be saved.
@sharonloomis52642 ай бұрын
Wow. Not only are we regenerating our land, but now we are regenerating the ocean. Awesome!
@savannadearing30202 ай бұрын
I love how you showed both sides of the conservation effort.
@rayrocher68872 ай бұрын
Thanks for trying to save the kelp forest, save the otter, God bless your work, amen, save the world, great job
@Beryllahawk2 ай бұрын
Interesting to see another angle of attack on the urchin problem. I can't recall now if it's north California or further up into the Pacific Northwest but I remember hearing about folks making steps towards harvesting urchins - not so much a deliberate overharvest, but an attempt to gather in LOTS of the creatures, take them OUT of that environment, then bring 'em inland and essentially fatten them up for human use as food. And that's not the only thing happening along the Pacific coast. It's good to know that there ARE people taking this seriously - I just hope we can also get policy makers involved in a way that promotes sustainability and restoration of habitat.
@quinlanlonergan48612 ай бұрын
There's been programs where they certify divers to carry a hammer and go smash as many urchins as they can in urchin barrens. They do it all. That actually turned out to be hindering the effort though, not helping, as the urchins would eat their fallen comrades and just get bigger. Whoooooo knows, maybe the otters aren't a keystone species (which is actually scientifically proven at this point, depending on who you ask), and they're actually PLANTING the kelp 😮
@PhoebeFayRuthLouise2 ай бұрын
Otters are indeed the cutest animals ever!
@justayoutuber19062 ай бұрын
Except when they breed forced gang-style
@theck6722 ай бұрын
Thank you for bringing attention and educating us on this situation, and showing what is being done to help fix things.
@walkerdawson52062 ай бұрын
This was the best video ever by PBS Terra
@MBMCincy632 ай бұрын
This ties in well with the other Nature series on the Maine sea coast, and their efforts.
@irishpatriciadesiree2 ай бұрын
Thank you for all helping in these endeavors!! ❤
@alkasoli40022 ай бұрын
Hats off to them..these people are really working hard
@brentfrank70122 ай бұрын
Love the work they are doing.
@HerAeolianHarp2 ай бұрын
Great video. Thank you.
@BallardBaller2 ай бұрын
I love the coast around the Big River... amazing water and wildlife
@leannaerickson97452 ай бұрын
I'm a Central Coast otter lover. They made a great comeback once. Thank you for helping them do it again.🦦😄🦦😄🦦😄🐟🐠🐡
@Blakeneyd2 ай бұрын
“Putting a piece of hope out” I love that.
@catc89272 ай бұрын
Love this stretch of coastline, Monterey Bay is one of my favorite places in the world. Getting to kayak among dozens of otters in Elkhorn Slough was amazing, although we had to backpedal a lot because state law requires us to stay 30 ft away from any otters.
@LoriCurl2 ай бұрын
🦦🦦🦦Go Otters! Help save the kelp forests of California!! Oregon too!👏👏👏
@paradisepipeco2 ай бұрын
*_”Here comes grandpa with an otter”_* ~~ Abraham Jebediah Simpson II
@ADiversLife25 күн бұрын
I loved this. We are dealing with similar issues in Bonaire but with the loss of coral due to climate change and Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease.
@RusstopiaАй бұрын
Just did the Nootka Island Trail this past week (off of Vancouver Island, Canada) and we saw lots of kelp and sea otters! The Canadian west coast was hit hard by that starfish/seastar disease over the past decade as well, but they're slowly returning. I had no idea how inter-related starfish, urchins, kelp and otters were in this way. Great video.
@lfrost67182 ай бұрын
Excellent reporting! Many thanks!
@1st1anarkissed2 ай бұрын
I recall a global vote for cutest animal, about 10 or 15 yrs ago and the otter won, hands down. (Otter be a pun in that, otters having hands and all.)
@LoganFiksman-uw9vz2 ай бұрын
Love Rosa, the best sea otter mama to ever live. Enjoy the sea food great sea food buffet in the sky :)
@cskarbek111 күн бұрын
huzzah!!!!!! keep these coming! more kelp! more urchins! MORE OTTERS!!!
@blancothevanchannel2 ай бұрын
As one who challenged the waters and was certified by NASDS at 14 years, I enjoyed the kelp. I enjoyed a lot of things that are no longer there.
@lalah94812 ай бұрын
One of my favorite childhood memories is of a beach day with my mom, she was ‘popping’ the balls on kelp and it grossed me out while making us laugh hysterically… this was 50+ years ago, when the tide left kelp on shore all along the coast. It used to be abundant. So sad to realize what’s been lost.😢
@Mmdmade2 ай бұрын
Wonderful! There is huge potential 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻. We have restored rivers, lakes - we can do this as well 👍🏻
@Mudskipper98762 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. I'm optimistic that we humans can fix our mistakes have done.
@santoast242 ай бұрын
I really wish the Terra shows (Deep Look, Orverview, ect) who do a lot of stuff in California (cus thats where they're based I guess) would look North of the 42 parallel to Oregon and Washington. Kelp forests up here have been decimeted too, but unlike in the Salish Sea, or in California where Sea Otters, however slowly, have been reintroduced, the same efforts up here havent worked as well. Its a different version of the same story, and one thats worth telling.
@bdwon2 ай бұрын
Contact your congressional representatives! I bet that Terra focuses on CA because of the Monterey Aquarium. Congress can get more money to your state universities!
@mom.left.me.at.michaels99512 ай бұрын
Otters and Beavers out here trying to save the environment more than some humans.
@DebTheDevastatorАй бұрын
Diffently more than pretty much all governments.
@BacchusDiem2 ай бұрын
96% of that kelp forest is gone????!!?!! God
@stevelee57242 ай бұрын
It's disgusting isn't it...Cheers from New Zealand
@DMTrance872 ай бұрын
Yeah that number blew me away as well... Not surprising though, it's California🙄
@Tiersein2 ай бұрын
@@DMTrance87this trend is worldwide, nature is dying
@corlisscrabtree36472 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏼
@paradisepipeco2 ай бұрын
*_”Here comes grandpa with an otter”_* ~~ Abraham Jebediah Simpson II
@emmett6242 ай бұрын
RIP Rosa ❤
@Segnr212 ай бұрын
Bones for the boneworm
@nataliemcgovern3087Ай бұрын
In Morro Bay, the otter population is rebounding. Due to conservation, activism, and loads of volunteers.
@deatherutts2 ай бұрын
One otter at a time sweet nature
@haileydee99542 ай бұрын
Video starts: awww cute!, Video Mid: horrifying news, Video End: maybe some hope?
@shihtzusrule91152 ай бұрын
60 cm a day. wish my garden would grow like that. Remember the surfboard stealing otter in Santa Cruz? She had a number, too.
@lawrenceheyman4352 ай бұрын
I think Tasmania lost its kelp forest. Urchins that previously couldn't survive the cold water got established due to a slightly warmer ocean. Maybe they can reseed, but only if they can find a predator for the urchins.
@nghiado9895Ай бұрын
Why don't they have a 5-star or 0-10 ranking? This just doesn't deserve a simple thumb up, but the max like.
@madelines.2 ай бұрын
if i could like this video multiple times, i would
@mellissadalby14022 ай бұрын
It is my understanding that the dearth of the "Crown of Thorns Starfish" is a major factor in the explosion of Sea Urchin populations. Sea Otters are only a piece of the puzzle. The Kelp forest needs the "Crown of Thorns Starfosh" to be repopulated.
@Tser2 ай бұрын
The starfish became the major predator after the otter were already nearly wiped out; they do discuss this in the video.
@TragoudistrosMPH2 ай бұрын
The video covers otters were primary, then wiped out, next starfish took over, and died of disease. I wonder if overpopulation of starfish facilitated the disease that caused starfish to break apart and die out?
@kpetersonkpeterson67122 ай бұрын
Crown-of-thorns is a tropical sea star that feeds on corals; the sunflower star is the California predator that feasts on urchins.
@luisorozcocardenas13832 ай бұрын
@@kpetersonkpeterson6712yeah i was so confused about this convo because we dont want no more thorned starfish, just sunflower 🌻
@rxg9er2 ай бұрын
Unfortunately it takes a lot of sea otters to protect kelp because otters don't like urchins very much. So it's only when their preferred prey, like abalone, have been reduced by other otters that they feed on urchins.
@patrickstar6862 ай бұрын
RIP Rosa D:
@scraller2 ай бұрын
o7
@joependleton62932 ай бұрын
Great video! Otters & humans co-exist in simular environments... an otter called Duncan*😊❤
@hopeworldstudio2 ай бұрын
Indigenous people in Alaska are cultivating kelp for human consumption. They should talk to each other. It was a pbs special with Martha Stewart narrating it.
@kendelleking83372 ай бұрын
There's an episode of Octonauts about this! Such a pity to hear the forest has declined so much though
@papyrusisverycool23722 ай бұрын
9:35 the awkward turn around lol
@Vtarngpb2 ай бұрын
3:02 where’s George and Gracie? 😂🖖
@purplecouch47672 ай бұрын
🎶Kelp: I need somebody!🎶
@paradisepipeco2 ай бұрын
*_”Here comes grandpa with an otter”_* ~~ Abraham Jebediah Simpson II
@paradisepipeco2 ай бұрын
_(🎶How could I dance with her mother, when I saw her dancing bare?🎵)_
@paradisepipeco2 ай бұрын
_(P.S. re: Abraham Jebediah "Grampa" Simpson II..... Just like Sir Paul's grandfather, he's a clean old man.)_
@nicstroud2 ай бұрын
Ooni anyone? Normally an expensive delicacy, it could be a cheap treat until balance is restored.
@Tonyhouse11682 ай бұрын
Uni. But yes
@kinngrimm2 ай бұрын
We live in paradise, it is us who make it hell at times.
@notthisbutthat2 ай бұрын
“DONT call them PLANTS” “These are the trees of underwater forests ” 🤓 “underwater PLANT eaters like sea urchins”
@jango78892 ай бұрын
i call em babadoos
@blaiseutubeАй бұрын
Otters are the Beaver of the ocean.
@noobierice72742 ай бұрын
Fun fact there is a market for uni, but sadly people perfer the red ones not the purple.....
@knpark2025Ай бұрын
Andrew Kim: Planting kelp is like putting a piece of hope out. Me, a Korean-Korean: Oh look, a "Gim" is farming "Dasima" from the other side of the world. His ancestors must be proud😅
@TheZinmo2 ай бұрын
Otters were hunted for the euroean fur trade long before european settlers arrived in numbers. Native people were a significant part of that economic web long before that. There is a direct line from the beaver wars to the extinction of beavers and the almost extinction of otters in the west.
@coachtaewherbalife88172 ай бұрын
We otter save them!
@paradisepipeco2 ай бұрын
I bet you just said that for the halibut.
@mary--am2 ай бұрын
hi joe! i was sent here by joe :)
@codem0de2 ай бұрын
Otters are Quiche Tone Pisces? That sounds delicious.
@opossumboyo2 ай бұрын
The natural world has countless systems to control populations from the top down and bottom up. Our species needs to begin to manage our unsustainable practices (through reducing birth rates, re-wilding natural areas, and drastically reducing per capita consumption) through overarching policy and societal changes, before we are forced to do so by resource scarcity and biosphere collapse. I want views like this to be possible for generations of humans after us to see. At our current rate of growth, that will not happen.
@suhankumarchoudhury99582 ай бұрын
i am curious about from where are the getting there fund to carry on what they do(protecting kelp).
@Vicki_Benji2 ай бұрын
Go Otters!
@LoveAllLight3692 ай бұрын
Don’t forget about the otter excrement that feeds the algae and kelp. 😅
@thelordvega2 ай бұрын
2:49 5 foot otter?
@cattalemattАй бұрын
Me: "this is going to be a great video demonstrating restoration ecology." Me instead: " . . . . BRO YOUR PADDLE IS UPSIDE DOWN!!!" lol
@douglaskoester56252 ай бұрын
We have an over population in some areas of Alaska…can we transplant them?
@mindyshively4947Ай бұрын
I bet you could reach out to the Monterey Bay Aquarium??
@bchrisward2 ай бұрын
I just realized I place food on my stomach just like an otter 😂😂😂
@jamesleatherwood51252 ай бұрын
Hey! Its the "Be Smart" guy! Hey Smart people!
@MinKhantThu-h6b2 ай бұрын
1:12
@stoodmuffinpersonal31442 ай бұрын
good boys
@douglasperry11312 ай бұрын
Not enough otter b-roll. Too many humans
@johnlord83372 ай бұрын
CA, OR, and WA need sponsoring and support agencies for urchin fisheries - and sell the product to domestic and foreign retailers. This allows translocations of northern kelp bed nurseries for restoration of kelp beds along the coastlines, ... and re-establish scattered sea otter populations. I am not an ecologist, tree hugger, or wild lover of animals - just a pragmatist. Man removed the "predators" in the wild, and distorted the entire working ecology of the system. - They destroyed the wolf population, having the elk and deer populations skyrocket, decimating the young forest saplings near the rivers, creating greater flash floodings and erosions of river banks and flood channels. - They destroyed the beaver population, who built the valley, ravine, and canyon dams stopping floodings, and allowing the growth of riparian woodlands (that the deer and elk munched on versus the beavers caretaking and harvesting their own river forests). - They destroyed the sea otters, who removed the sea urchins, that kept the ocean kelp beds intact, preventing coastal shoreline erosion and transmigration of sea sands, creating greater wind, water, and weather decimation of the land. - They destroyed the river otters, who controlled invasive species (lampreys, suckerfish, etc.), who destroyed the fishery populations. - They overharvested to decimation the local timber forests, creating greater flood and landslide situations. - They overharvested to decimation the local fishery populations, creating other river, creek, and stream populations that controlled the water insect populations. - Restore the wolf populations, keeping the deer and elk populations under control, recreating the needed riparian forest zones. - Restore the river and sea otter populations, keeping the invasive species and sea urchins under control, restoring the clean waters, kelp beds of the coastline, and local fishery populations. - Restore the beaver population, in tandem with the wolves, recreating the needed riparian forest zones, that also protected the fishery populations. - Restore the riparian forest zones around the waterways, saving the waterways, and downstream watershed geology and ecology. - Restore the fishery populations, keeping the waterways clean and intact. - Stop overharvesting of the timber forests, with proper maintenance, forest duff and fire-prone situations. - Stop overharvesting of the fisheries. - Also support the enhancement and population restorations of purple martins (swallows), bats, raptors, bluebirds, tweeties, ... controlling the daytime and night time populations of flies, biting flies, mosquitoes, gnats, noseeums, chiggers, ticks, ... small rodent populations, disease controls within native wildlife.
@Tser2 ай бұрын
Unfortunately these urchins are not the tasty kind that people already eat. The species that are considered tasty by humans produce a ton of roe, and purple sea urchins do not. There have been pushes to try to get people interested in eating them, but like trying to get people to eat nutria/coypu, it hasn't been particularly successful. They're not not what people are interested in eating in large quantities.
@TragoudistrosMPH2 ай бұрын
@@Tserit turns out they are tasty, just that they don't produce the volume of the red. Marketing them as beneficial to eat, like lionfish in Florida will help. Capitalism looks for the easiest solution, not the most beneficial solution. If we can't change that, we can at least utilize it to strategically undo that horribly long list of problem our ancestors created.
@Tser2 ай бұрын
@@TragoudistrosMPH They have been trying to do this for many years, however, and it just hasn't caught on. There have been numerous videos and articles and pop-up restaurants and so on over the years and it hasn't put a dent in the urchin population. If it could, that would be great, but so far it really hasn't been effective.
@kyledexheimer65482 ай бұрын
@@Tser people have taken the purple urchins, kept them in captivity and fed them and produced high quality uni.
@hopeworldstudio2 ай бұрын
Would love to see $1 uni on sushi menus!
@tktyga77Ай бұрын
Given that kelp forests are basically the temperate rainforests of the sea just as coroal reefs are the tropical rainforests of the sea, why not help along the otter & sea star conservation efforts by harvesting some sea urchins ourselves? The stuff in them can be used like butter of the sea & the shells can be used like lanterns & lamps, for example & the spines have been used in apothecarical/pharmaceutical settings. Let's also look into more ways to use some kelp to wash up in similar ranges such as fabrics & those of sea urchins
@ronkirk50992 ай бұрын
The sea otter turned out to be a keystone species to the health of kelp forests. I've seen areas of the seafloor overwhelmed by sea urchins and completely devoid of kelp where there are either too few or no sea otters present. Not a pretty sight.
@kevdaag25232 ай бұрын
Are we going to talk about sea stars? Hello?phew, finally, halfway thru.
@iambrian7692 ай бұрын
We Live On Land But We Are Nothing Without The BIG OCEAN.
@chrisr35702 ай бұрын
Seeing the aquarium, I just thought 'George and Gracie'
@takingbacktheplanetАй бұрын
geez bro how tall ARE you. :P but yeah, sea otters are great :D
@stevelee57242 ай бұрын
Are Otters ocean cats ? I love them 😮Cheers from New Zealand
@RichardHead4202 ай бұрын
My man looks like beast from X-men before his mutation took over.
@suhankumarchoudhury99582 ай бұрын
this things look straight out of subnautica. though it could be possible that the things in subnautica is inspired from it as well
@vesawuoristo41622 ай бұрын
We need restore so many habitats , humans have destroyed so much
@greatgongo37722 ай бұрын
Shoutout to the twitch streamer DougDoug for raising over $600,000 for Monterey bay aquarium last weekend
@epablom1Ай бұрын
Kinda hoping to see Rosa in the vid ngl 🦦👀
@ericleung6632 ай бұрын
I came to watch otters. All I saw were people talking.