divFOLLY BEACH Hundreds of thousands of dead menhaden littered the
sand here Thursday, stretching in either direction from the Folly
Pier in a line along the tide wash as far as could be seen.
Blackbirds and grackles were picking at them.The bait fish appear
to have been killed by the cold. State wildlife biologists who
responded to the kill found the menhaden had been otherwise
healthy, said Phil Maier, coastal reserves director with the S.C.
Department of Natural Resources. Officials at other nearby beaches
had no reports of fish kills there.divcaption id alignalignleft
width180 captionPhoto by Alan Hawes State wildlife biologists said
the dead menhaden that covered the sand Thursday on Folly Beach
likely died because of low sea temperatures.img
srchttppostandcourier.media.clients.ellingtoncms.comimgphotos20110106FISHKILLt180.JPG370a03faaa4bde2115f371a02430eb3e6a451be5
altphoto width180 height270 captiondivThe dieoff follows the
discovery of thousands of dead starfish on Isle of Palms in
December amid a growing list of sea life trauma caused by unusually
cold sea temperatures. The cold has wildlife officials alarmed for
food and game fish, such as shrimp, sea trout and red drum.
Isolated reports of lethargic and dead trout and drum have been
coming in to the DNR, Maier said.We certainly are nearing
temperatures where were concerned about shrimp too, he said.The
situation isnt about to get any better. More cold air is expected
over the next three or four weeks, said Mark Malsick, S.C. Climate
Office severe weather liaison. Another cold winter rain is forecast
to move into the state Monday morning. The National Weather
Service, Charleston, is predicting a chance of snow flurries Sunday
and Monday night as far toward the coast as Summerville.The cold up
and down the East Coast has already caused a massive fish kill in
Maryland and a number of stunned sea turtles being treated locally
at the S.C. Aquariums turtle hospital.Menhaden are smaller bait
fish that travel in large schools, and tend to move farther south
as waters cool. They swim shallower than other fish, and can be
more susceptible to cold patches of water. The number found dead
isnt so startling because the schools tend to be massive.In
Maryland, officials are investigating the dieoff of about 2 million
spot fish, CNN reported. Like menhaden, spots are smaller bait
fish. Cold water also is the suspected cause of those deaths.At
Folly Beach on Thursday, Jennifer and Dan Berei of Charlotte were
celebrating their first anniversary when Jennifer saw gleams along
the tide line and went down to collect what she thought might be
shells.We were like, Wow, she said. Just that little pile right
there looks to be thousands of them. Its amazing. Crazy.Shrimp and
other marine life can die off in mass kills when water temperatures
hover in the mid40s for any length of time. The starfish died
because the surf chilled to those temperatures after frigid weather
earlier in December.Along with the starfish, DNR biologists heard
reports of stunned red drum and sea trout, and weakened or dead
shrimp turning up in crabbers traps. They shut down commercial
shrimping early to keep a bigger supply of overwintering shrimp out
there.Temperatures offshore and in Charleston Harbor on Thursday
were in the upper 40s.In the winter of 200001, prolonged water
temperatures at about 46 degrees destroyed an estimated 97 percent
to 99 percent of the shrimp population, and shrimpers qualified for
federal disaster assistance. It took two seasons for the shrimp to
recover fully, and five seasons for sea trout.On Thursday, the
scene at Folly Beach was incongruous, the seas shining in a muted
sun and menhaden carcasses shining a path along the sand. The
Bereis didnt let it bother them. They held hands and started off
down the beach.I figured it was because of the cold, Dan Berei
said. It happens. Thats nature.div
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