Tsunami Drifters arrive in Washington

zooboy28

Well-Known Member
Pretty interesting story here - basically, a boat load of fish have washed up on the southern Washington State coast, after drifting across the Pacific following the March 2011 Tsunami in Japan. Upon arrival, all but one fish of the 30 marine species in the boat were euthanased, with that Striped Beakfish going on show at the Seaside Aquarium, Oregon.

Video and story here: Fish hitch a ride on debris from Japan to Washington... | Stuff.co.nz

If that video doesn't work (didn't for me) try this one: ITN News Japanese tsunami fish arrives in boat on Washington coast

8/4/2013

What a long, strange trip it's been for a small striped fish native to Japan that apparently hitched a cross-Pacific ride in a small boat believed to be part of a tide of debris from that country's March 2011 tsunami.

Washington state Fish and Wildlife Department biologists found five of the striped beakfish alive in a water-filled bait box on a six-metre-long Japanese boat that washed ashore March 22 at Long Beach in southwest Washington.

Invasive species specialists also found a host of other Japanese species of sea anemones, cucumbers, scallops, crustaceans and worms living in what they call the very rare "aquarium" of water that pooled inside the upright boat.

Except for one fish that the Seaside Aquarium has agreed to quarantine and exhibit, the rest of the critters were euthanised to minimise the risk of introducing invasive species to Washington, said biologist Allen Pleus.

The surviving beakfish goes on display this weekend at the aquarium, The Oregonian reported. Curator Keith Chandler says his staff dubbed it the "tsunami fish."

"It's pretty cool. It's about 4 inches (10 centimetres) long," Chandler told the newspaper. "We're trying to get it different things to eat ... and it may have eaten, but it's a shy little guy."

Researcher John Chapman at Oregon State University's Hatfield Marine Science Centre in Newport is just back from a trip to Japan. He calls the find "stunning."

"We said this couldn't happen," he said. "And nature is like, 'oh yes it can'."

Chapman says the fish is probably young since mature beakfish turn black. They can grow as long as 15 inches.

"There were five fish total we found in the boat's compartment, and this is the first time we've seen vertebrates come ashore in tsunami debris," Bruce Kauffman, a state Fish and Wildlife biologist in Montesano, told The Seattle Times. "Finding these fish alive was totally unexpected."

So how did the creatures survive such a trip?

The boat apparently drifted bow up, with its stern below the water's surface.

The containment area there that was open to the ocean "became a little cave of refuge," Pleus said. "The fish could go out to feed and come back in. The boat was their home, their house."

It's common for fish to associate with larger debris floating in the ocean but "nobody's seen fish that have travelled with debris this distance," Pleus said, adding, "It indicates there could be other fish floating with debris that we never see."

Most such debris gets roughed up in the surf as it nears shore, which would disperse any fish but Pleus says this boat came ashore upright.

All of which raises some troubling questions.

"There could be other types of fish associated with this debris that we don't see but down the line we could find new populations of fish established on the coast," Pleus said.

The other euthanised creatures — at least 30 different species — were preserved and sent to scientists around the country for analysis, he said.

The boat, bearing the name "Saisho-Maru," was removed from the beach.
 
If they were able to handle the fishes and other animals to euthanize them, why not send them all to an aquarium ( would make a very special exibit !!!! ) and do even more rechearch on them ? After they died a 'natural' death, scientists would still have the oppertunity to do their analysis !
 
If they were able to handle the fishes and other animals to euthanize them, why not send them all to an aquarium ( would make a very special exibit !!!! ) and do even more rechearch on them ? After they died a 'natural' death, scientists would still have the oppertunity to do their analysis !

Yea, I don't get why they had to euthanase all of them, seems a bit extreme. A group of the fish, with perhaps a crab and some other large invertebrates, would have made a very interesting display. I'm not really sure what analyses the scientists plan on doing, would be good to know.
 
I'm not really sure what analyses the scientists plan on doing, would be good to know.
this article -- A live striped Japanese beakfish survives Tsunami and lands up in Oregon -- says "The fish is now being studied by scientists at the Seaside Aquarium in Seaside, Oregon, to confirm presence of atomic radiation - the fish has now become a popular attraction for visitors."

This one -- http://edition.cnn.com/2013/04/05/us/washington-tsunami-stowaway-fish/ -- says "The other four had the honor of contributing to research at Oregon State University, where researchers will dissect them learn their ages and what they've been eating. Sea anemones, scallops, crabs, worms and sea cucumbers that hitched a ride on the same boat also will be studied."
 
hmm, this article gives a different version, basically implying the surviving fish was stolen from the Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the aquarium is keeping it when it shouldn't be....
Tiny fish that survived tsunami, ocean crossing from Japan makes debut in Seaside | OregonLive.com
One more mystery has arrived in Oregon as a result of the March 2011 Japanese tsunami.

But this one is unique: It's alive and goes on display Saturday at the Seaside Aquarium.

About five striped beakfish were found on a boat from Japan that washed ashore near Long Beach, Wash., last month. The Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife euthanized most of them, perhaps because of fears that the fish would become an invasive species.

But not before someone spirited away one of the black-and-white striped fish to the Long Beach City Hall.

Employees there in turn called the Seaside Aquarium, which came to the rescue.

They didn't want to turn it loose," said Seaside Aquarium curator Keith Chandler. "And they didn't want to let it die."

So Chandler and the aquarium staff rescued the critter they have dubbed the "tsunami fish."

"When I first saw it, it was in a bucket at City Hall," Chandler said. "It's pretty cool. It's about 4 inches long. We're trying to get it different things to eat ... and it may have eaten, but it's a shy little guy."

Researchers will study the fish to try to determine what they fed on, how they got here and how old they are, Chandler said. "The big mystery is whether there are more out there. If it was following the boat and feeding other fish off it ...That's the big unknown."

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