Posted on 10/15/2020 10:37:26 AM PDT by Roman_War_Criminal
Unexplained deaths of sea life are continuing to cause anxiety in Russias Far East.
On Tuesday, fish, octopuses and crabs were filmed washed ashore hundreds of kilometers away from the spot where the alarm was first raised.
A video of the ecological disaster near Ozernovskiy village on Kamchatkas western coast shows dead marine creatures scattered along a 50-meter-wide area of the beach.
The peninsula, some 7,000km east of Moscow, is home to one of the earths most pristine environments.
The footage is similar to clips that came from Avacha Bay on the opposite eastern coast in late September, when numerous marine life washed ashore. By land, the distance between Ozernovskiy and Avacha Bay is around 250 kilometers.
Scientists have flown to the site by helicopter to take samples from the water, and remove soil and animal carcasses for analysis, local authorities said. The Prosecutors Office and environmental watchdog Rosprirodnadzor are also sending their people to Ozernovskiy.
The fact that the beaches near Ozernovskiy are clean, according to witnesses, and because of the large distance between the two contamination spots, it is unlikely that the local man-made facility near Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky is to blame for the disaster, he pointed out.
The governor was presumably referring to the Kozelsk chemical landfill, which stands on the river flowing into Avacha Bay. A possible leak from the landfill has been considered among the potential reasons for the death of 95 percent of sea life in the area. Its believed that itll take the fauna up to 15 years to fully recover.
Water samples taken from Avacha Bay after the disaster showed that the concentration of phosphates, iron, phenols and ammonium were seven times higher than normal. But a specific agent that caused the contamination couldnt be established.
Russias Investigative committee has launched a criminal probe into the incident.
According to one Russian scientist, this could be caused by a toxic algae bloom:
The mass death of sea creatures in Russias Kamchatka region was caused by toxins from microalgae rather than man-made pollution, a senior Russian scientist said on Monday, citing preliminary findings of an investigation.
Locals on the volcanic peninsula in the Pacific raised the alarm in September as surfers experienced stinging eyes and sea creatures, including octopuses, seals and sea urchins, were found dead on the shore. A Greenpeace handout photo shows the water near the Khalaktyr beach on the Kamchatka peninsula
Conservation activists had raised concern that the source of the pollution could be a Soviet era storage ground for poisonous chemicals on Kamchatka that might have seeped out into the sea.
I am sure that we are facing a large-scale phenomenon, but not an uncommon one for Kamchatka, called harmful blooming algae, the vice president of Russias Academy of Sciences, Andrei Adrianov, told journalists Monday.
He said that water samples showed a high concentration only of Gymnodinium (microalgae), which produces toxins that affect invertebrates.
Adrianov added that the same toxins could have also caused the symptoms experienced by divers and surfers.
Last week, scientists said the pollution had formed a 40-kilometre-long (25-mile) slick which has been moving south towards Japan and the disputed Kuril islands.
Activists of Russias Greenpeace branch have voiced concern that the situation is not improving and dead animals continue washing up on beaches.
Adrianov, on the other hand, said nature is regenerating itself and very quickly.
Earlier probe results presented by regional authorities said the local bays showed above-permitted levels of phenol and petroleum products. Locals have been warned to avoid the beaches.
Coming just months after a massive oil leak in Siberia, the latest incident sparked a public outcry with a petition calling for an open investigation into the events so far garnering over 175,000 signatures.
Notably, while human negligence seems to have been involved in that incident, there was also speculation that permafrost melt could also be partly to blame.
Meanwhile, Russian investigators have launched a criminal probe over the illegal handling of dangerous substances and pollution of the marine environment.
A 50 meter stretch? THE EARTH IS DOOMED!!!!
Probably an algal bloom, but worth investigating. Scientists scared worldwide? Only those trained to soil themselves on cue.
Yep, the "Burgess Shale," this ain't!
Regards,
Sounds like a massive dumping of industrial contaminated waste water. But, is it from nearby on land, or delivered from tankers off shore?
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Probably the result of another Russian military nuclear experiment gone awry. Just guessing. They do it all the time....
I see an incredible preponderance of starfish with extra limbs and what looks like some kind of stag coral. I think the “die-off” was dumping. Maybe local fisherman got frustrated with starfish killing off all the shellfish; if they were particularly ignorant, that could even explain all the starfish with 6 or more arms... but then some species of starfish NORMALLY have 6, 7 or 9 arms.
My guess.. One or more of Russia, China, North Korea, South Korea, or Japan, dumping toxic crap into the ocean again.
Nothing a tax hike, more government oversight and more loss of freedoms cant fix.
S Korea and Japan, not likely. But the other three, yes.
Not every Algae bloom is caused by humans, but plenty have been.
Golf courses with lots of fertilizer run off into the ocean can do this for example.
Scientists shouldnt be scared, they should be curious and study the phenomenon, scientifically
If local fishermen dumped to kill the starfish, they sure killed a lot of molluscs at the same time.
They mess with us.... We mess with them??
It’s already cooked , Oh wait they like it Raw
“Fukushima radiation?”
Sure. Why not.
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