Thousands of dead fish scooped from Ventura Harbor
175 tons of dead sardines scooped from CA marina
photo © 2000 Robin | more info (via: Wylio)
Associated Press
By NOAKI SCHWARTZ 03.31.11
LOS ANGELES -- Three weeks after a huge fish die-off in Southern California, officials have a body count but still can't say what drove 175 tons of sardines into a marina.
Dave Caron, professor of biological sciences at the University of Southern California, said Thursday that as many as 2.5 million sardines blanketed the surface and floor of King Harbor Marina.
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35 tons of dead sardines scooped from King Harbor so far; cleanup costs top $100,000
March 9, 2011The effort to rid King Harbor of millions of dead fish before they start to decay had the look of a lab experiment Wednesday.Boats trawled slowly through the Redondo Beach marina, dragging nets behind them to capture fish from a thick layer of carcasses deposited on the harbor bottom.Volunteers wearing rubber gloves went from slip to slip scooping floating clusters of sardines with fishing nets and plucking individual, hot-dog sized fish from the water.Firefighters aimed a hose at the harbor bottom to try to agitate the fish for a diver to capture. And a sewer vacuum truck was converted to suck fish from the water with a long plastic hose that had the look of an elephant's trunk.Redondo Beach officials said it will take several days and cost at least $100,000 to clean up King Harbor after the sudden fish die-off that began Monday evening.Read the rest of the story here.
Millions of dead fish blanket Redondo's King Harbor Marina
By Larry Altman, Torrance Daily Breeze Staff WriterMarch 9, 2011Millions of sardines created a massive stink and an even bigger cleanup effort in Redondo Beach's King Harbor Marina on Tuesday after they swam inside overnight, became trapped and died.Twelve to 18 inches of dead sardines blanketed the water's bottom in Basin 1 off Marina Way. Another thick layer of dead fish coated the surface from the breakwall to the inner docks, surrounding boats and walkways.Authorities with the California Department of Fish and Game, along with other ocean biologists at the scene, declared the mass death a natural event. The fish, they said, sucked every drop of oxygen from the water and couldn't breathe."They are in every slip and every dock," said Fish and Game spokesman Andrew Hughan. "It's a whole lot of fish."Hughan said authorities believe the huge school of sardines, perhaps blown in by the night's 40-mph winds and crashing waves, swam into King Harbor and became disoriented.Those who chose other basins were fine, but the schools that headed into Basin 1 "backed themselves into a corner" and were unable to find their way out, he said.Read the rest of the story here.