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Redondo Beach police Sgt. Phil Keenan said he believed a predator fish chased the sardines into the marina where their sheer numbers caused them to suffocate. Raphael Kudela, a professor of ocean sciences at University of California, Santa Cruz, said sardines are not the brightest fish. "They are that dumb actually," he said. "They get into shallow water and then can't figure out how to get back out, and you've got such a concentration in one small area they literally pull the oxygen down until they suffocate." Fire department, harbor patrol and other city workers were expected to continue dredging up the fish and haul truckloads of them to a landfill, where they will be turned into fertilizer. City officials estimated the cleanup would cost $100,000. On the water, nature was tackling the problem in other ways. Seals and pelicans flocked to the marina to feast on sardines, and large groups of other fish were seen nibbling at the floating mats of their dead brethren. Carl Johnson, 59, and his wife, Marie, 57, came from nearby Torrance to see the fish calamity. "We've had that stuff of the hundreds of birds dying in the Midwest, and now this. ... You do think about life and death," he said. "These fish were swimming freely yesterday," he said philosophically. Marie Johnson added: "It's really sad."
[Associated
Press;
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