Thousands
of dead prawns wash up on beach in Chile
Thousands
of dead prawns have washed up on a beach in Chile, sparking an
investigation.
BBC,
20
March, 2013
Hundreds
of dead crabs were also washed ashore in Coronel city, about 530km
(330 miles) from the capital, Santiago.
Fishermen
suggested the deaths may have been caused by local power stations
that use seawater as a cooling agent. The power firms have not
commented.
Experts
are looking into water temperature and oxygen levels and other
details to explain the deaths.
"We're
investigating the Coronel Bay to establish the physical parameters of
temperature, electric conductivity and, above all, the oxygen,"
said local environment official Victor Casanova.
Local
fishermen blamed nearby power generation plants Bocamina 1 and 2 and
Colbun.
"I'm
69 years old and started fishing when I was nine, but as a fisherman,
I never saw a disaster of this magnitude,'' Gregorio Ortega told
local Radio Bio Bio.
While
some blame pollution, others say the death of the crustaceans could
be a consequence of the El Nino phenomenon, which warms the waters of
the Pacific.
Marisol
Ortega, a spokeswoman for the fishermen, said she feared the deaths
would affect the livelihood of their community.
"The
way everything is being destroyed here, come the high season in
November, we're already thinking we won't have anything to take from
the sea," she said.
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