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First Arkansas now Maryland........ Fish found dead ???
http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/01/06/maryland.fish.kill/index.html?iref=NS1
http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/01/06/maryland.fish.kill/index.html?iref=NS1
The bay's surface water temperature late last month ? 32.9 degrees--was the coldest in 25 years, according to state records. Historical lows were recorded at 13 locations on the bay, from the mouth of the Elk River to Rock Hall and Kent Island to Point Lookout. Spot have little tolerance for temperatures below 35.6 degrees.
While summer fish kills have become a regular occurrence, winter-related kills happen less frequently. Twenty million spot died in 1976 and again in 1980, said Rudy Lukacovic, DNR's fish kill investigator for 23 years. Both of those kills ranged from Baltimore Harbor to Solomons.
"I remember being in a boat off Kent Island and looking up the bay and seeing what I thought was an ice flow moving toward me. It was a raft of thousands and thousands of dead fish," he said of the 1980 incident.
In all cases, Lukacovic said the most likely cause of death was super-chilled water reducing the effectiveness of the gill cell membranes to regulate the salt intake of the fish. Salt enters the fish at toxic levels and they die of dehydration.
In addition, he said, strong winds that pummeled the state during the last week of the year pushed ice-cold surface water down to where the fish were taking refuge.
Spot are a popular target for recreational anglers, especially youngsters, who fish from piers and bulkheads. Anglers catch spot and use them as live bait to entice striped bass. Paying customers on boats out of Kent Island and Tangier target big spot, called "slabs."
"They are a valuable fish, a family friendly fish that can be caught by anyone," said Martin Gary, a DNR fisheries biologist.
They get their name from the dark spot above and behind the gills. They are bottom feeders and grow to be about 14 inches. The fish mature at around 2 years and leave the bay each fall to spawn offshore, but some juvenile fish stay behind and winter in deeper waters. Larval spot enter the bay over the winter and move into creeks and tributaries in April and May.
The kill is not likely to upset the balance of nature. DNR's 2010 survey of the spot population showed the fourth-largest juvenile class in 33 years.
"It may not be a mega-class, but it's a pretty significant one," Gary said. "It's a prodigious species, built to produce a lot of fish. I can't imagine this kill would put a dent in them."
Repeat after me, "There is no such thing as Global Warming or Climate Change".
And now the end is near and we must face the final curtain..........
Repeat after me, "There is no such thing as Global Warming or Climate Change".
Repeat after me, "There is no such thing as Global Warming or Climate Change".