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Habitat Heartbeats: Listening to What Oysters and Mussels Can Tell Us about Southern California Estuaries

Habitat Heartbeats: Listening to What Oysters and Mussels Can Tell Us about Southern California Estuaries

Wed, Jan 14 2026, 3 - 4pm

Speaker(s): Luke Miller and Kristen Goodrich

Location: Webinar


Southern California’s estuaries can experience large swings in water quality due to events like freshwater inflow, sewage spills, and estuary mouth closures. The Tijuana River NERR (TRNERR) monitors several estuaries in San Diego County to better understand how biological communities respond to changes in water quality. Through an iterative process with TRNERR and other users, this project team co-developed a biosensor monitoring system that uses shellfish (oysters and mussels) as biosentinels. Alongside state and local land managers and other wetland and aquaculture professionals, the team designed an open-source electronic sensor that attaches to shellfish and monitors gaping behavior and heart rate. These metrics that can be used as indicators of physiological stress in response to environmental changes.

In this webinar, the project team will describe their collaborative process within the team and with additional potential end users. Potential users included resource managers,  aquaculture practitioners, and research biologists working with these bivalves in other settings. The team will describe the basic components of the biosensor equipment and approaches used in the field and lab for gathering and analyzing data. Data from the focal estuaries will be used to illustrate individual and group responses of the biosentinel bivalves to rapidly-shifting water quality conditions. 

Speakers:

luke miller

Luke Miller, San Diego State University

Luke Miller is an Associate Professor of Biology at San Diego State University. His research examines how shoreline animals interact with their constantly-changing environment, including how they use behavior and physiological responses to deal with extreme conditions. Luke served as the project lead on the Habitat Heartbeats project. 

kristen goodrich

Kristen Goodrich, Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve

Kristen Goodrich is the Director of Training and Engagement at TRNERR. She is an interdisciplinary social scientist and focuses on the human dimensions of coastal management. She served as collaborative lead for the project and loved watching people’s eyes light up when they learned that, yes, oysters have heartbeats!

kevin marquez johnson

Kevin Marquez Johnson, California Sea Grant

Kevin Marquez Johnson is an Aquaculture Extension Specialist with California Sea Grant. His research and extension programming focus on the California aquaculture industry with multiple projects investigating abiotic and biotic stressors influencing oyster growth and survival.