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  • A plainfin midshipman fish (Porichthys notatus) boiled to death on the shores of Vancouver Island. The victim of a heat wave (a recent study concluded it would have been almost impossible without human-made climate change) that coincided with extremely low tides in the middle of the day. The fish come into the intertidal zone to mate, spawn and protect their eggs.
    20210628-DSC_7337.jpg
  • A dead crab, boiled to death, on the shores of Vancouver Island. The victim of a heat wave (a recent study concluded it would have been almost impossible without human-made climate change) that coincided with extremely low tides in the middle of the day. I saw hundreds of sea stars, crabs and even some fish that died from the heat. It's likely billions of animal were killed.
    20210627-DSC_7040.jpg
  • A leather sea star (Dermasterias imbricata) boiled to death on the shores of Vancouver Island. The victim of a heat wave (a recent study concluded it would have been almost impossible without human-made climate change) that coincided with extremely low tides in the middle of the day. I saw hundreds of sea stars, crabs and even some fish that died from the heat. It's likely billions of animal were killed.
    20210627-DSC_7042.jpg
  • An ochre sea star (Pisaster ochraceus) boiled to death on the shores of Vancouver Island. The victim of a heat wave (a recent study concluded it would have been almost impossible without human-made climate change) that coincided with extremely low tides in the middle of the day. I saw hundreds of sea stars, crabs and even some fish that died from the heat. It's likely billions of animal were killed.
    20210627-DSC_7027.jpg
  • An ochre sea star (Pisaster ochraceus) boiled to death on the shores of Vancouver Island. The victim of a heat wave (a recent study concluded it would have been almost impossible without human-made climate change) that coincided with extremely low tides in the middle of the day. I saw hundreds of sea stars, crabs and even some fish that died from the heat. It's likely billions of animal were killed.
    20210627-DSC_7031.jpg
  • A plainfin midshipman fish (Porichthys notatus) boiled to death on the shores of Vancouver Island. The victim of a heat wave (a recent study concluded it would have been almost impossible without human-made climate change) that coincided with extremely low tides in the middle of the day. The fish come into the intertidal zone to mate, spawn and protect their eggs.
    20210628-DSC_7349.jpg
  • A plainfin midshipman fish (Porichthys notatus) boiled to death on the shores of Vancouver Island. The victim of a heat wave (a recent study concluded it would have been almost impossible without human-made climate change) that coincided with extremely low tides in the middle of the day. The fish come into the intertidal zone to mate, spawn and protect their eggs.
    20210628-DSC_7336.jpg
  • An ochre sea star (Pisaster ochraceus) dead, presumably from extreme heat and extra low tides on the east coast of Vancouver Island, Canada.
    20210627-DSC_7031.jpg
  • A dead and dried-out plainfin midshipman fish (Porichthys notatus) on a storm drain, probably dropped here by a bird. Nanaimo, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210605-DSC_6173.jpg
  • A dead leather star (Dermasterias imbricata), likely a victim of the extreme heat wave coupled with mid-day extra low tides.
    20210627-DSC_7042.jpg
  • A dead Galapagos land iguana (Conolophus subcristatus) possibly starved to death during the drought North Seymour Islet, Galapagos Ecuador.
    20191208GalapagosTopside129.jpg
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Shane Gross

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