Sardines by the millions hit beach
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Deepa Bharath
They packed the beach like sardines. Wait a minute. They were
sardines. Tons of them.
The silvery dead fish washed up by the millions onto the beach
Thursday night, piled one on top of the other between 13th and 24th
streets. It was an event city officials said they haven’t see in at
least the last 20 years.
City workers cleaned up the fishy mess Friday morning, Newport
Beach Deputy General Services Director Mike Pisani said.
“We hauled three tons of sardines off the beach this morning,” he
said.
It took three hard-working people, two mechanical beach cleaners
and a dump truck to cart the sardines to the county landfill.
The fish covered a 20-foot-wide band along the beach, Pisani said.
“Most of the fish came in late last night with the high tide,” he
said.
Lifeguard Brian O’Rourke said it was a rare sight.
“They were light in some areas and dense in others,” he said.
Lifeguards had a couple of theories on how and why the fish washed
up, O’Rourke said.
“We were guessing that either a fishing boat dumped them because
their bait died, or the water was too warm for them to survive in,”
he said.
The second theory is probably closer to being right, said Joel
Cassara, program director at the Long Beach Marine Institute.
“Sardines normally do school in millions,” he said. “So I would
rule out that they were bait.”
The event was probably a direct effect of southern storms, which
are causing whirlwind changes in water temperatures and currents
which may be dragging in toxic plankton or other harmful food supply
into local waters, Cassara said.
Water temperatures were averaging 65 degrees throughout the
summer, he said.
“Yesterday, the temperature shot up to 75 degrees,” Cassara said.
“That causes breathing problems for the fish because the oxygen
transfers directly from the water to the gills.”
And when the rate at which the oxygen is transferred changes
because of the temperature within a 10-hour period, the fish run into
problems adjusting to that change, he said.
California’s waters are usually warmer compared to other oceans of
the world, Cassara said.
“That’s why a lot of animals have a good time surviving,” he said.
Unless the ocean pulls some vile trick on them.
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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