Sea-star along the Pacific coast
J Meyer
Sea-star along the Pacific coast

Disintegrating sea stars—a process described as melting, with the arms detaching and crawling away from each other—is being caused by a virus that’s been detected in West Coast waters for more than 70 years. That’s according to new findings published in late November in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by 24 co-authors including the University of Washington’s Carolyn Friedman, a professor of aquatic and fishery sciences, and Colleen Burge, who earned her bachelor’s and doctorate from UW and is now back as a postdoctoral researcher here after four years of postdoc work at Cornell University. Scientists based at other institutions who do much of their research at the Friday Harbor Laboratories also played a big role in this study.

Read more at UW Today »