Tons of dead sardines just washed ashore on a Japanese beach, creating a bloody, hellish landscape. Sadly it’s not unusual.
Starting June 3, massive amounts of dead
sardines began clogging a fishing port called Ohara, located near Isumi
City on the western side of Japan. A blogger named Kay for the Asian
news site RocketNews24.com reported on Tuesday that the port was closed due to the emergency. Locals trucked tons of fish to landfills, according to the Daily Mail’s Leon Watson.
There are now so many dead fish that
locals in the town in Isumi City, Chiba Prefecture, are having to truck
the rotting remains to landfills. And yet still more dead sardines keep
washing up on shore.
Reports suggested that locals are not
only finding the sight disturbing, but the huge amount of dead fish has
created a smell that’s becoming unbearable.
No one knows exactly why this is happening, but other communities know the horror firsthand.
In March 2011, millions of sardines
suddenly died in King Harbor Marina in Redondo Beach, Calif. The cleanup
cost more than $100,000 and required a crew of 200 workers frantically
using a variety of methods to collect the silvery fish.
At the time, the Los Angeles Times reported that
scientists and wildlife officials believed windy conditions or possibly
an oxygen-poor water column in the ocean caused the sardines to sweep
into the harbor with a storm the day before. As a result, the oxygen
levels in the area may have dipped too low and killed the fish.
In May 2011, the largest fish-kill in
Georgia’s history occurred in the Ogeechee River. More than 38,000 dead
fish were found near an outfall pipe for King America Finishing, a
textile processor, the Augusta Chronicle reported.
The state’s environmental protection division said the fish died from a
bacterial disease caused by environmental factors and it fined the
company $1 million for discharging fire retardant through an
unauthorized line.
Other areas have experienced massive fish
kills from algae blooms, red tides, toxins, changes in water
temperature, and diseases. Commonly a lack of oxygen is at the root of the problem since fish need to absorb dissolved oxygen to live.
In Japan, Twitter user Yumi Hareyama
shared a photo of the dead sardines with a caption that read in part,
“Try to clean the sea with everyone.”
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