'Massive Grave of Dead Fish': What's Happening on Texas Beaches?Here's why thousands of dead fish washed up on Texas beaches this weekend.

ByDan Bova

Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Thousands of dead fish washed up on several southeast Texas beaches over the weekend leading park officials to warn beachgoers to stay away. (Imaging the stench that comes with thousands of dead fish, we're sure they didn't really need to tell people hit the pool instead.)

Officials of Quintana Beach County Parkexplained on social mediathat the massive death toll was likely due to a "perfect storm" of factors.

Warm water

每个公园官员,当水的温度rises above 70 degrees Fahrenheit, it becomes harder for it to maintain high oxygen levels. So if a school of fish finds themselves in warm shallow water, "the fish will start to suffer from hypoxia. This causes fish to act more erratically, which in turn, further depletes the oxygen from the water."

Calm seas

Aside from temperature, oxygen levels are affected by surface mixing, "where air meets the water through wind and waves," wrote park officials. "We have experienced very calm seas inshore for about 3 weeks. There has been very little wave action."

Cloudy skies

Oxygen in water is created through photosynthesis from microscopic phytoplankton or macroalgae. That is driven by sunlight. "Photosynthesis stops at night and may slow down on cloudy days, but plants and animals in the water continue to respire and consume free oxygen, decreasing the dissolved oxygen concentration," officials wrote.

Speaking toNPR, Katie St. Clair, the manager of the sea life facility at Texas A&M University atGalveston, says this all might look worse than it is. Most of the dead fish were Gulf menhaden, which are the favorite snacks of 32 different predators, including sea birds, sharks and other large fish. "The flip side is that with this die-off of fish," explains St. Clair, "there is a huge nutrient pulse into our environment. It's kind of a circle of life."

That's not to say all is hunky dory for all the Nemos and Dorys swimming around out there. "Water can only hold so much oxygen at certain temperatures, and certainly we know that seawater temperatures are rising," St. Clair said. "It is concerning and something that needs to be monitored."

Wavy Line
Dan Bova

Entrepreneur Staff

特殊的副总裁Projects

Dan Bova is the VP of Special Projects at Entrepreneur.com. He previously worked at Jimmy Kimmel Live, Maxim and Spy magazine. Check out his latesthumor books for kids, includingWendell the Werewolf,Road & Track Crew's Big & Fast Cars, andThe Big Little Book of Awesome Stuff.

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