Florida conchs are in hot water. Can moving them deeper revive a plunging population? – The Mercury News

Alex Harris | Miami Herald (TNS)

MARATHON, Fla. — The rescue mission began with a splash. Flippered and masked snorkelers rolled off a boat anchored near Marathon and into chest-high water. It didn’t take long to spot the target.

“This is what we’re looking for,” said Gabriel Delgado, hoisting a nearly foot-long shell, all elegant whorls and spires, above the lapping waves. He tilted it toward the sun, revealing the sunset colors inside — a Florida queen conch.

Delgado, an associate research scientist with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, was leading a mission to find and relocate the iconic animal to greener — and cooler — pastures, where they might stand a better chance of mating.

After a one-two punch from nasty hurricanes, Irma in 2017 and Ian in 2022, the Florida population of the mollusk took a nosedive. In 2017, before the hurricane, scientists estimated there were about 700,000 adult conch along the Florida reef tract. In the most recent survey, in 2022, that number dropped to 126,000.

Numbers like that spell out one thing to scientists like Delgado. This population needs to make more babies, ASAP. At least, if the namesake of the independent island community of the Florida Keys — the Conch Republic — is not just a slogan for flags and bumper stickers.

But shallow water conchs appear to have a serious problem of sexual dysfunction.

Since 1999, Delgado and other scientists have noticed something strange about the queen conch nearest to shore. They weren’t reproducing. And when scientists sliced them open to figure out why, they noticed their reproductive organs were shrunken and underdeveloped, even though the conchs were the right age to start mating.

“We were thinking that it’s got to be some sort of anthropogenic contaminant, some chemical, sewage, something,” Delgado said.

One Environmental Protection Agency-funded study later found that wasn’t the case. And stranger still, the researchers found that when they moved those nearshore conch into deeper water, surrounded by other conchs, their reproductive system seemed to recover and they even started mating.

“Then it dawned on us, why don’t we look at temperature extremes,” Delgado said.

The running theory is that nearshore waters in the Florida Keys, where plenty of the remaining conch call home, are so shallow that they get very cold in the winter and very warm in the summer. Too cold for the snails to develop the gonads they need to mate, and then too hot to focus on anything but survival.

“What happens is the energy they would normally put in reproduction gets shunted off into basically staying alive,” he said.

Looking for love

Earlier this month, scientists set out to repeat an experiment that’s been successful before — and grown all the more crucial as ocean temperatures continue to rise under climate change.

The rescue mission, funded thanks to a $42,750 grant from the Fish & Wildlife Foundation of Florida, started in a shallow, hard-bottom area in Marathon. FWC researchers and a volunteer snorkeled around the area, peering past the spiny lobsters and clusters of deep purple sea urchins, to spot and collect adult queen conch.

They loaded more than 30 into blue milk crates and swam them back to the boats, where other researchers were waiting to start measuring.

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