View Thread
Before Posting, Please Read Our Posting Guidelines Below.

1. Use the full 4 digit year for everything you are asking your question about. Example: 1962, 1988, 2000, 2011
2. Include the correct name of your Whaler model. Example: Montauk 17, Montauk 170, Outrage 26, Outrage 260
3. Include the length when necessary. Example: 16, 17, 18, 20, 22
4. Do not post your email address anywhere on this site as it is already in your user profile.

 Print Thread
Biologists Investigate Sardine Die-Off in Southern California
Guts
#1 Print Post
Posted on 03/09/11 - 3:02 PM
User Avatar
Member
Personal Page

Posts: 612
Comments: 8
Joined: 11/21/08

California Department of Fish and Game News Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - March 9, 2011

Contact: Andrew Hughan, DFG Communications, (916) 201-2958


DFG Biologists Investigate Sardine Die-Off in Southern California
Initial testing shows no water contamination or other toxins

State biologists are running tests on a dozen dead fish from the Redondo Beach Harbor to determine the cause of a massive die-off Tuesday.

Millions of dead of sardines were discovered in the Redondo Beach harbor Tuesday morning, initially raising concerns about possible water contamination. Water samples tested on-site Tuesday were clear of contamination, but California Department of Fish and Game (DFG) wardens collected about a dozen dead fish to send via overnight mail to the DFG laboratory in Rancho Cordova, where biologists will run tests to confirm that the die-off was not due to toxins in the water.

Because all the dead fish were contained in one area of the harbor, officials believe that the most likely culprit was oxygen deprivation. Recent storms could have caused the school of sardines to swim around the breakwater and into the enclosed harbor, where they were trapped and unable to get out before depleting the water of oxygen.

Although this is not a common occurrence, biologists say that it can happen under certain conditions.

The city of Redondo Beach activated its crisis response team Tuesday and by noon, more than 50 volunteers were scooping fish with nets. The dead fish were transported to a collection center, where they will be recycled into fertilizer. The harbor remained open throughout the day and continues to remain open.

Biologists at the northern California laboratory expect to complete their testing by early next week, and DFG wardens will continue to monitor the harbor.


Guts/AKA/Kim
 
Jump to Forum:
Bookmark and Share
Today's Date & Time
May 5, 2024 - 8:43 AM
Users Online
Welcome
oddbald
as the newest member

· Guests Online: 13
· Members Online: 0
· Total Members: 50,051
Login
Username

Password

Remember Me


Not a member yet?
Click here to register.

Forgotten your password?
Request a new one here.
Top 5 Models Posted
· Montauk 17 1,626
· Sport 13 1,358
· Outrage 18 551
· Nauset 16 399
· Sport 15 363

View all Models Here
Render time: 0.13 seconds Copyright WhalerCentral.com © 2003-2024 83,269,761 unique visits