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Species Unite

Reuven Bank and Andrew Kim: When the Ocean Lost Its Stars

Species Unite

elizabeth novogratz

Society & Culture, Philosophy

5911 Ratings

🗓️ 12 June 2025

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"72 juveniles is 28% of the current population of sunflower stars under human care in California. More than a quarter of them are at our facility. If you had asked us that question about a year and a half ago. The answer would be zero at our facility, and the answer across California would be six total." - Andrew Kim

In 2013, one of the largest marine disease outbreaks on record, sea star wasting syndrome swept through echinoderm populations, laying waste to sunflower stars across their historic range. Once common in California, sunflower stars are now functionally extinct there.

This devastating population crash is one of the leading drivers of the 96% decline in kelp forest cover in Northern California in the last decade, as sunflower stars are no longer prowling rocky reefs and scaring purple urchins, who graze on kelp.
 
Sunflower Star Laboratory was founded by a group of concerned citizens who watched California's kelp disappear before their eyes and were inspired to take action.
 
This conversation is with Reuven Bank and Andrew Kim from Sunflower Star Laboratory, where they are actively growing sunflower stars with the aim to bring the stars and the kelp forests back to the ocean. 

 

Transcript

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0:00.0

Species.

0:07.0

Species.

0:09.0

Unite.

0:10.0

Unite.

0:11.0

And 72 juveniles is 28% of the current population of Sunflower Stars under human care in California.

0:20.0

More than a quarter of them are at our facility.

0:22.9

If you had asked us that question

0:25.7

about a year and a half ago,

0:27.0

the answer would be zero at our facility.

0:29.9

And the answer across California would be six, six total.

0:33.6

. Hi, I'm Elizabeth Novagrats.

0:43.9

This is Species Unite.

0:49.0

In 2013, one of the largest marine disease outbreaks on record, C-star wasting syndrome, swept

0:56.5

through echinoderm populations, laying waste to sunflower stars across their historic range.

1:02.5

Once common in California, sunflower stars are now functionally extinct there.

1:07.6

This conversation is with Reuben Bank and Andrew Kim from Sunflower Star Laboratory,

1:13.2

a marine conservation nonprofit actively growing sunflower stars, a keystone predator, crucial

1:19.3

to kelp forest ecosystems.

1:39.6

Music Thank you both so much for doing this.

1:40.6

It's great to see you.

1:45.6

And I'm really happy to talk about Sunflower Stars, something which I did not know existed. It's really cool to learn about a whole new species that we're losing very quickly.

1:53.1

Why don't each of you introduce yourselves and just a little bit about who you are and what

...

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