http://www.dailychilli.com/news/10205-dead-sardines-still-clogging-marina

Dead sardines still clogging marina 

Dead fish float in the King Harbor area of Redondo Beach, south of Los Angeles.


Thousands of slimy, reeking sardines gurgled to the surface of an increasingly 
murky Southern California marina on Thursday as crews kept scooping and 
vacuuming tons of fish that perished in a huge, unexplained die-off.

Volunteers and city workers scrambled for a third day to remove the bloated 
fish that bobbed to the surface of King Harbor.
It could take about a week to clean up the mess.

"The virtue is we can get them easier," police Sgt. Phil Keenan said. "The vice 
is they smell."

An occasional breeze carried the stench from the shallow marina where the fish 
died late Monday.

By Thursday evening, 85 tons of fish had been removed, Mayor Mike Gin said.

Sunny, hot weather made finishing the cleanup a priority before the smell 
became any worse and the decomposing fish corpses feed bacteria that could 
reduce oxygen levels in the marina water and kill other sea life, officials 
said.

The water was already beginning to look brackish with tiny bubbles, scales and 
scum floating on the surface with the decomposing fish.
Volunteers and city workers netted fish and picked them by hand from the marina 
rocks. Keenan said several techniques were being used, including vacuuming the 
bottom.

"Depending on where the fish are, we have to use a different technique," Kennan 
said. "There's not a catch-all method - no pun intended."
The cleanup came after the enormous school of sardines apparently suffocated in 
the harbour, possibly while seeking shelter from a predator or simply becoming 
lost near a breakwater.

Instead of leaving, the fish crowded toward the back of the marina and used all 
the oxygen in the water, marine experts have said.
California Department of Fish and Game officials have estimated that at least a 
million fish died.

Fish and Game experts are confident the sardines suffocated, but about a dozen 
fish were sent to a laboratory in Rancho Cordova, where they'll be examined to 
see if a disease or toxin killed them, department spokesman Andrew Hughan said.

"Luckily, they're little small fish so it probably won't take long," he said.

The reason the fish gathered and died in the marina could remain a mystery.

"What this isn't is an oil spill or a chemical spill or an environmental 
disaster of any kind," Hughan said. "It's a natural fish die-off. It's kind of 
natural selection. It's sad but it happens."

He praised Redondo Beach for its fast response to the fishy tragedy. The city 
created a procedure for a rapid response after a toxic algae bloom known as a 
red tide killed millions of fish in 2005.

"It's the best disaster management that I have ever seen," Hughan said.

The fish are being sent to a composting center in Victorville. They are being 
buried and in 90 to 120 days will be ready for use as compost, said Gary 
Clifford, chief operating officer of Athens Services. The waste hauling company 
is considering selling the fish-based fertilizer to farms under the name "King 
Harbor Blend," he added.

Some residents had other plans for the sardines, though. - AP


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