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// 50,000 dead starfish found on Irish beach

Extreme weather conditions have killed tens of thousands of starfish and left them strewn across a sheltered beach. A carpet of pink and mauve echinoderms, a family of marine animals, appeared yesterday morning on Lissadell Beach in north Co Sligo. The adult starfish, measuring between 7cm and 20cm in diameter and estimated to be up to 50,000 in number, stretched along 150 metres of the strand.

Marine biologist and lecturer at Sligo Institute of Technology Bill Crowe speculated that they had been lifted up by a storm while feeding on mussel beds off shore. "The most likely explanation is that they were feeding on mussels but it is a little strange that none of them were attached to mussels when they were washed in," he said. He added that if they had died as a result of a so-called 'red tide' or algal bloom, other sealife would have been washed ashore with them. "These were almost all adult size and the typical starfish variety that is found in the North Atlantic but there was nothing else mixed in with them," he said. Surveying the unusual scene, he placed some in a bucket of seawater to test whether they were alive, but while this prompted a slight response from one or two of the creatures, the vast majority were dead. Tim Roderick, District Conservation Officer with the National Parks and Wildlife Service, agreed the phenomenon was most likely caused by recent bad weather. "They turned up almost certainly as a result of an exceptional storm event. A storm hit the seabed where these sub-tidal animals were and lifted them up and washed them ashore," he said. A spokesperson for the Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government said that investigations were continuing into how they came to be washed ashore but initial indications pointed to the stormy weather, which has been a feature in the north-west in recent days. In a similar episode earlier this year, thousands of dead starfish washed ashore on Youghal Beach in Co Cork. Scientists speculated that they, too, had been thrown on to the beach by an underflow, which was probably caused by a storm at sea. Source Irish Independent © Belfast Telegraph

 

Reads: 1068
Added: 06/11/2009
Added By: Peter McCloskey
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Caroline Luley on 06/11/2009

It is very important that we make every effort to understand what causes this sort of thing. This is not an isolated event and the number of such strandings is escalating. I live in Florida and see my share on the beaches here. If we don't make an effort to understand the causes we will be unable to make an effort to change circumstances that are responsible. This will eventually spell the end of the earth as we know it.

Article Rating: 5 / 5

k_michael on 06/11/2009

Starfish are predators; what's likely to happen is that local the mussels will have their numbers spike due to the lowered number of predators, which will, in turn, be brought back to normal levels as the predator population rebounds - and/or the Irish people will be harvesting and eating a lot more mussels for a while ;)

Article Rating: 1 / 5

Daniel on 06/11/2009

Poor starfish!

Article Rating: 3 / 5

Gladys on 06/11/2009

Oh my how beautiful are these creatures. We need to take notice of our wrong doing and try our very best before it's to late and our eco system falls apart right before our own eyes. God bless!

Article Rating: 1 / 5

heather on 06/11/2009

This is so sad. Starfish are beautiful creatures. Is there any way this could of been prevented though? If storms are what causes this I dont see how to help save the little guys.

Article Rating: 1 / 5

heather on 06/11/2009

This is so sad. Starfish are beautiful creatures. Is there any way this could of been prevented though? If storms are what causes this I dont see how to help save the little guys.

Article Rating: 1 / 5

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