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‘Carnage’ as dead marine life washes onto beaches near mouth of flooding River Murray

news100 by news100
January 5, 2023
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'Carnage' as dead marine life washes onto beaches near mouth of flooding River Murray
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Dead octopuses, sea cucumbers and other marine life has washed up on South Australia’s south coast, not far from the mouth of the River Murray.

Key points:

  • High flows are heading towards the end of the River Murray at the south coast
  • Dead marine animals have been found on beaches around Port Elliot
  • An expert says it could be linked with more fresh water entering the ocean

Experts are investigating whether the deaths are connected with the high flows from the Murray that have started to cause flooding in the Lower Lakes.

The water off south coast towns near the Murray Mouth has been brown for at least two weeks but what Port Elliot resident and surfer Nisa Schebella described as “carnage” occurred yesterday.

“It’s heartbreaking,” Ms Schebella said.

Hundreds of sea cucumbers and other creatures could be seen dead at Chicken Run, Fisherman Bay and Basham Beach, just east of the main town of Port Elliot.

Two octopuses found on Basham Beach, east of Port Elliot.(ABC News: Che Chorley)

Sea slugs, seahorses and some fish were also among the casualties.

“It’s pretty unpleasant, that’s for sure,” Ms Schebella said.

Department of Primary Industries and Regions fisheries officers have visited the site to collect samples for diagnostic testing to rule out infectious or notifiable diseases.

“Water samples have also been collected and will be tested to rule out harmful algae and also measure salinity,” a spokesman for the department said.

SA Health said there was no evidence of increased microbial contamination, including E. coli, in floodwaters entering Goolwa or nearby beaches.

Dead sea cucumbers on a beach
Sea cucumbers dead on the beach at Fisherman Bay, east of Port Elliot.(ABC South East SA: Caroline Horn)

Deaths could be linked with fresh water

Sea foam has been seen at the Boomer and Knight beaches, west of Port Elliot.

Zoe Doubleday, a marine ecologist with the University of South Australia, said sea foam was often connected with algal blooms.

She said photos of the deaths she had seen looked “macabre”.

She said it was an “unusual array of animals” but they appeared to be mostly invertebrates that lived on the bottom of the sea.

A blue-ringed octopus lying amid rocks
A dead blue-ringed octopus at Fisherman Bay.(ABC South East SA: Caroline Horn)

“It does seem that if you’ve got lots of floodwater coming up you might have a big stress event for lots of different reasons,” she said.

“One might be because the animals are going through something like osmotic shock because they’re marine animals exposed to more freshwater conditions for a longer period of time, which can cause death.

“A lot of more intertidal animals can cope with changes in salinity, but if it’s prolonged and they can’t get away from it, perhaps that might be causing them stress.

“If it was a disease, I might find that hard to jump to that conclusion because there’s multiple different types of animals impacted.”

A woman in black blazer reaching for shellfish samples placed on lab table
Marine ecologist Zoe Doubleday researches marine and fisheries ecology, geochemistry, and animal biology.(ABC News: Eric Tlozek)

Swimming lessons continuing

VACSWIM lessons have been continuing as normal in Port Elliot’s more protected Horseshoe Bay.

Surf Life Saving SA chief executive Damien Marangon said SA Health had told him the sea foam and brown water was not unsafe for humans.

Alexandrina Council chief executive Nigel Morris said the ocean’s water quality was monitored daily.

“We’ve been assured that it continues to just be organic matter — your leaves, your twigs and so on,” he said.

“So it continues to be safe to be swum in, but, yes, it is brown — a chocolatey-milk type of colour — but it continues to be safe.”

A slightly brown bay looking from a hill with trees
Brown water on South Australia’s south coast, as seen from Encounter Bay.(ABC South East SA: Caroline Horn)



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