Maryland’s 2 million dead fish caused by cold water

WASHINGTON,  (Reuters Life!) – The death of two  million fish that washed up on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay  in Maryland appears to have been caused by a sudden drop in  temperature, the state’s Environment Department told Reuters yesterday.
The mass kill is the latest in a string of bird and fish  deaths around the world. Around 5,000 birds fell out of the  Arkansas sky over the New Year’s weekend and many dead fish  were also found in a different part of the state.

Since then, reports of smaller-scale die-offs have been  reported in Europe, Brazil, and Asia, causing many to speculate  about the cause of the kills.

There is a perfectly reasonable explanation for the  Chesapeake deaths, the Maryland Department of Environment  said. “The cause of this appears to be the rapid temperature drop  combined with the large population of the juvenile spot fish,”  spokesman Jay Apperson told Reuters yesterday.

The coldest December in 25 years caused cold water stress  to the already overpopulated species, the department said in a  statement.

There have been many such incidents in the past with 2,900  kills afflicting all fish species between 1984 and 2009  according to the department. The largest ever die-off was  around 15 million in January, 1976. The Chesapeake Bay is the largest estuary in North America.