A million dead fish clog California marina

Fish and Game officials said they think the sardines depleted oxygen levels and suffocated, but remain unsure

AP/Alex Gallardo
A Los Angeles County lifeguard scoops up dead fish in the King Harbor area of Redondo Beach, south of Los Angeles. An estimated million fish turned up dead on Tuesday, puzzling authorities and triggering a cleanup effort.
Salon.com
By ROBERT JABLON
Associated Press

An estimated 1 million fish turned up dead Tuesday in a Southern California marina, creating a floating feast for pelicans, gulls and other sea life and a stinky mess for harbor authorities.
 
Boaters awakened to find a carpet of small silvery fish surrounding their vessels, said Staci Gabrielli, marine coordinator for King Harbor Marina on the Los Angeles County coast. Authorities said there was also a 12- to 18-inch layer of dead fish on the bottom of the marina.
 
California Fish and Game officials said the fish were sardines that apparently depleted the water of oxygen and suffocated.
 
"All indications are it's a naturally occurring event," said Andrew Hughan, a Fish and Game spokesman at the scene.
 
The die-off was unusual but not unprecedented, he said.
"In the world of fishing this is an afternoon's catch," he noted.
Nonetheless, the scale was impressive to locals at King Harbor, which shelters about 1,400 boats on south Santa Monica Bay.
 
"The fishermen say they've never seen anything this bad that wasn't red tide," Hughan said, referring to the natural blooms of toxic algae that can kill fish.
 
Hughan said water samples showed no oils or chemicals that could have contributed to the deaths. He said some of the fish were being shipped to a Fish and Game laboratory for study but the cause was likely to be uncomplicated.

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