This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:
fact-checked
reputable news agency
proofread
North Sea shell survey brings out volunteers
Hundreds of volunteers descended on the beaches of the North Sea coast this weekend to collect sea shells as a measure of the sea's biological diversity.
While there is a serious scientific purpose to the exercise, it is also a fun day out on the coast for Belgian, French and Dutch families with kids.
On Saturday, Natascha Perales and her children marked a wide spiral pattern on the sand in Middelkerke, in Flanders, and filled their plastic buckets with shells.
The harvests were taken to a sorting center run by volunteers, to be counted and divided up by species.
"We found mussels, oysters, cockles, at least six different species," 40-year-old Perales told AFP. "It's a great activity, despite the weather."
Braving stiff gusts of wind, the dozen participants kept the Middelkerke collection point busy.
Laurence Virolee, 41, came with her three children.
"We learned a lot of things," she said. "Last year we took part in a clean-up day on the beach. It's important for the kids to see the evolution in biodiversity and make them aware of the climate."
The collections took place along 400 kilometers (240 miles) of coastline and around 800 people took part in three countries, with France joining the sixth annual event for the first time.
In total, around 38,000 shells were brought in, roughly as many as in last year's event.
Invasive species
"Shells are a good indicator of the state of biodiversity in the North Sea, " explained Jan Seys, who organizes the survey for the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ).
"Last year, 15 percent of the shells found belonged to exotic species," he said, amid fears that foreign shellfish species might become an invasive danger to native organisms.
"We have seen, for example the Atlantic Jackknife Clam appearing on our coasts."
The volunteers were also on the lookout for shells with holes in them, trying to measure the spread of predatory sea snails preying on shellfish.
Near the beach, retired biologist Joris Hooze, 75, taught volunteers how to examine molluscs under his microscope and distinguish their differences.
"We've seen organisms that normally live in warm waters turning up more and more," he said. "It's a sign of climate change."
The European Union wants to clean up the seas around its coasts and restore the natural ecosystem by 2030. To do that, it has assigned 800 million euros in funding to the task.
"If we're going to hit that target, we'll need the general public," said Seys. As well as its scientific value, the shell hunt served to raise awareness, he added.
© 2023 AFP