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SAVING THE BLACK ABALONE

Black abalone were once the most abundant large shellfish clinging to the rocks of intertidal zones between Baja and Oregon. A savored delicacy for sea otters and native coastal people alike, these hard-shelled marine snails were prized for the iridescent colors and the occasional pearl found inside their shells. Like most other species of abalone native to coastal California, black abalone have been decimated by seafood enthusiasts and the fisheries that fill their plates.

The Center petitioned to list the black abalone as an endangered species in 2006. Shortly after receiving the Center’s petition, the National Marine Fisheries Service announced that the black abalone may well deserve protection, and in January 2009, the agency declared the species officially endangered under the Endangered Species Act. But the species still doesn’t have protected habitat, so in 2010 the Center filed a notice of intent to sue.

Scientists agree that the black abalone is withering toward extinction, and unfortunately there are a multitude of factors contributing to the decline of this shellfish. Although abalone fishing was banned early last century, harvesting resumed in 1968 — and this threat combined with abalone wasting disease to wipe out the majority of Southern California’s black abalone population and leave the species facing a severe decline. Today, the black abalone is presented with another threat, just as grave as overfishing or disease: global warming. Warmer water will increase the deadliness of wasting disease and will likely reduce the kelp species consumed by abalone. Rising sea levels will eliminate much of the species’ intertidal habitat. Ocean acidification, caused by the ocean’s absorption of excess carbon dioxide, may further render oceans inhospitable to sea animals.

KEY DOCUMENTS
2008 federal Endangered Species Act listing proposal
2006 listing petition

ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT PROFILE

ACTION TIMELINE

NATURAL HISTORY

MEDIA
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Search our newsroom for the black abalone

RELATED ISSUES
Oceans
Ocean Acidification
Global Warming and Endangered Species Initiative
Golden State Biodiversity Initiative
The Endangered Species Act

Contact: Brendan Cummings

Photo by Glenn Allen, NOAA