Basin Head's unique Irish moss disappearing - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:55 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Basin Head's unique Irish moss disappearing

A unique strain of Irish Moss is disappearing from the lagoon at Basin Head in eastern P.E.I. , and an invasive species may be to blame.

Giant moss only grows in a lagoon at Basin Head, P.E.I.

Fragments of the moss are being preserved in case it disappears from the lagoon. (Nancy Russell - CBC)

A unique strain of Irish moss is disappearing from the lagoon at Basin Head in eastern P.E.I.

Scientists and the local watershed group say invasive green crab could mean the end for the marine plant known as giant moss.

"In the daythere was probably a few ton of Irish moss here,"said FredCheverieof theSourisand Area Branch of the Wildlife Federation.

"Now you could probably gather it all up and put it in a five-gallon bucket."

Irish moss is a valuable sea plant, a rich source of carrageenan, which isa thickening agent used in food processing.

What makes the moss unique

  • It is free floating and stays in the lagoonby attaching itself to the blue mussel. Other Irish moss strains are anchored.
  • It yields 75 per centpurecarrageenanversus 45 to50 per centfound in the common form,
  • The plant is much larger -800 grams -than thecommon strain of Irish moss -50 grams,
  • It maintains its red-brown colorthroughout the year while the commonform exhibits color changes from red toyellow to green throughout the summer.

TheSourisand Area Branch of the P.E.I. Wildlife Federation has been setting a large net trying to trap the rare strain as it floats across the lagoon looking to attach itself toa new home. In the past that home wasmussels.That was before green crab moved into the lagoon and began eating the mussels.

"The reason it seems to have disappeared,the number one reason, isgreen crab moved into the area in the late 1990s.And it has decimated it," saidCheverie.

"We also have a nitrate problem. And we've got a fair bit of silt moving in [the] particular upper reaches of this here basin."

The researcherswill take the fragmentsto an area where mussels grow in hopes the moss will find a home quickly ahead of the green crab.

Fisheries and Oceans has also gathered up the rare moss and is keeping it in a lab in case it disappears from the lagoon altogether.

It has also placed the moss in mussel socks hanging from buoys above the basin floor out of the reach of the green crab, and is protecting other plants inside of cages in the lagoon.