Friends of Otter Rock Marine Reserve

Stewardship. Science. Outreach.

Kelp Forests at Otter Rock Marine Reserve

When you look offshore from the Devil’s Punchbowl you may see forests of bull kelp, a type of long, rubbery seaweed, swaying with the water. Bull kelp anchors to the rocky bottom with holdfasts and rises up to the surface, where it forms canopies of leaf-like blades that float at the surface. Otter Rock Marine Reserve has patches of kelp forests so dense that they are easily visible from above the water. These highly productive plants can grow as fast as 10 inches per day.

Why is kelp important?

Kelp is considered a foundation species in marine ecosystems. Much like trees in a forest, kelp provides 3D habitat and structure for many different organisms. In kelp forests, you can find many species of fish and plankton, as well as foraging seals and seabirds. Gray whales also come to feed on tiny shrimp living in Otter Rock Marine Reserve’s kelp forests. These forests provide a protected nursery for many eggs and young. They are essential to supporting healthy populations for many economically important species, such as rockfish. Kelp is also an excellent source of food for many species both underwater and on shore.

Kelp forests can provide climate resilience and coastline protection. Kelp captures carbon from the atmosphere and absorbs excess nutrients from the water. These forests can also provide natural protection against coastal flooding by absorbing energy from large ocean waves.

Kelp Forest

(Photo credit: Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife)

What is the status of kelp forests today?

Despite the potential for kelp forests to thrive in Oregon’s cold and nutrient-rich waters, scientists are observing a patchy but alarming decline of kelp along the West Coast. While Otter Rock is home to one of the most robust kelp forests in Oregon’s nearshore, only portions remain of its former abundance. Our kelp forests have experienced the “perfect storm” of environmental stressors, from a population increase of local kelp eating purple urchins to changing ocean conditions.

Historically, urchin populations were balanced by predatory sea stars and sea otters. Over the past ten years, a rise in sea star wasting syndrome greatly reduced local sea star populations, resulting in an urchin boom. Additionally, the removal of urchin eating sea otters along the Oregon Coast in the early 1900s had already disrupted the delicate ecosystem balance. Without sea otters and recovered sea star populations to keep urchin abundance in check, kelp forests continue to be at risk of disappearing.

What can we do to help kelp forests?

Groups such as the Oregon Kelp Alliance (ORKA) and the Elakha Alliance are working to restore balance to our ecosystem. ORKA is leading the way in kelp conservation efforts by closely monitoring changes in kelp abundance through aerial and underwater surveys. They conduct sea urchin removals in targeted areas to help create environments for new kelp to grow. ORKA relies on local coastal communities to help carry out their restoration projects. The Elakha Alliance is a nonprofit group working to reintroduce sea otters in Oregon’s coastal ecosystem. The return of this essential keystone species would help keep urchin populations in check and allow kelp forests to rebound.

Fun Facts

  • Bull kelp is an annual seaweed that washes ashore every year. It reproduces by dropping spores to the ocean floor to regrow each year.
  • Bull kelp can grow to over 140 feet tall in deeper water.
  • Globally, kelp forests capture an estimated 200 million tons of CO₂ (carbon dioxide) each year.
  • Humans farm kelp for its incredible nutritional benefits from many vitamins and minerals.
  • Gray whales feed on mysid shrimp living in kelp forests. In fact, these whales need to eat 2,400 pounds of food everyday throughout the summer feeding season.
  • A healthy adult sea otter may eat as many as 50 urchins per day.