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News / Northwest

Millions of krill wash up on coast

The Columbian
Published: June 28, 2013, 5:00pm

GRANTS PASS, Ore. — Millions of krill — a tiny shrimplike animal that is a cornerstone of the ocean food web — have been washing up on beaches in Southern Oregon and Northern California for a few weeks.

Scientists are not sure why.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration oceanographer Bill Peterson says they may have been blown into the surf by strong winds while mating near the surface, and then been dashed on the beach.

The species is Thysanoessa spinifera. They are about an inch long and live in shallower water along the Continental Shelf. They have been seen in swaths 5 feet wide, stretching for miles on beaches from Bodega Bay, Calif., to Newport, Ore. Some were still alive.

“People have sent us specimens. In both cases, the females had just been fertilized. That suggests they were involved, maybe, in a mating swarm,” Peterson said. “But we’ve had a lot of onshore wind the last two weeks. If they were on the surface for some reason and the wind blows them toward the beach and they are trapped in the surf, that is the end of them.”

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