blademaster
I'm moving to Brazil
+2,075|7072
https://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2008/03_02/StarTF1103_604x800.jpg

They lay in their thousands, covering the beach in a carpet of pink and orange. Some were curled up, their spiny feet pointing towards the sky. Others lay flat where they had been washed up by the tide. All were dead.

If the collective noun for a normal group of starfish is a constellation, then this pitiful sight on the Kent coastline was more like a galaxy.

Mass starfish strandings, or "wrecks", are not uncommon in Britain and typically happen once a year.

But the scale of death visited upon the beaches of southern England in the past few weeks has stunned conservationists and prompted a major investigation into what could be killing so many marine animals. It had been assumed - hoped, even - that the deaths were the result of freak weather or unusual tides outside the control of people.Some of the deaths undoubtedly were. But experts now believe the slaughter which has blighted Kent and Sussex is also the result of human activity - more particularly, the intensive fishing for mussels.

Starfish are without doubt one of the great wonders of the marine world. "They are amazing," says Prof Martin Attrill at Plymouth University, one of Britain's leading starfish experts.

"They have incredible powers of regeneration. If you chop off an arm, it will grow back within months and if you chop a starfish in half, it will grow back into two. "In the Thames estuary they were once regarded as pests, and fishermen used to try to kill them by slicing them in half and throwing them back. But, of course, all they were doing was doubling the numbers."

Most species of starfish have five arms, but some have many more. The sun starfish - a giant creature sometimes seen off the west coast of Britain - can have up to 24 arms and grow up to 30in across.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/a … to=newsnow
Bulldogz
Blacking Out the Friction
+32|6426|Rexburg, Idaho
Starfish are incredible.

We actually have a bunch of those Sun Starfish here on the oregon coast, they are quite amazing too look at.

It's sad to see such amazing creatures killed in such huge numbers.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6969|Texas - Bigger than France
I dunno.  I have doubts that all of the sudden thousands of dead starfish show up because of overfishing mussels in the area over a period of a few centuries.  Wouldn't it be more gradual?
blademaster
I'm moving to Brazil
+2,075|7072

Pug wrote:

I dunno.  I have doubts that all of the sudden thousands of dead starfish show up because of overfishing mussels in the area over a period of a few centuries.  Wouldn't it be more gradual?
yea thats what I thought too weird to see so many thousands dead starfish on the beach.
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|7101|Canberra, AUS
"They have incredible powers of regeneration. If you chop off an arm, it will grow back within months and if you chop a starfish in half, it will grow back into two. "In the Thames estuary they were once regarded as pests, and fishermen used to try to kill them by slicing them in half and throwing them back. But, of course, all they were doing was doubling the numbers."
Haha, win.

That's an extremely odd picture btw. I dearly hope it was tides and not some industrial retardation.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
Poseidon
Fudgepack DeQueef
+3,253|6964|Long Island, New York

Spark wrote:

"They have incredible powers of regeneration. If you chop off an arm, it will grow back within months and if you chop a starfish in half, it will grow back into two. "In the Thames estuary they were once regarded as pests, and fishermen used to try to kill them by slicing them in half and throwing them back. But, of course, all they were doing was doubling the numbers."
Haha, win.

That's an extremely odd picture btw. I dearly hope it was tides and not some industrial retardation.
Asexual reproduction is
mtb0minime
minimember
+2,418|7081

Seeing all those just makes me want to have a starfish fight with someone. Grab them by a leg/tentacle/arm/penis/whatever and chuck it at a friend and laugh as the leg pokes his eye our or the thing latches on to his face
DeathBecomesYu
Member
+171|6606
I hope Patrick survived!
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6969|Texas - Bigger than France
Seems like this is being presented as yet another man-made catastrophe.  1) They breed fast 2) they grow fast 3) they eat a lot, 1 + 2 + 3 = ummmm do we really need 100,000 starfish when they'll be back causing havoc to the coast within two months?

Pisses me off when the green angle is abused.  The only way man did this is if some jackass decided to dump a few thousand gallons of toxic waste in the area - and if so...why is it JUST starfish?

This is not man-made.  That reporter should get smacked for insinuating so.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6969|Texas - Bigger than France
Well, I take that back.  Has it been raining a lot in Kent?

Could be pesticide runoff.  But most likely the rainwater affected the water quality.

Assuming it rained a lot...of course.
Masques
Black Panzer Party
+184|7149|Eastern PA
The starfish hordes are invading Britain...better call the BNP.
krazed
Admiral of the Bathtub
+619|7207|Great Brown North
man, that would stink after a few days :\

i would have so much fun shooting the seagulls that are going to be there eating
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,072|7199|PNW

krazed wrote:

man, that would stink after a few days :\

i would have so much fun shooting the seagulls that are going to be there eating
Careful, birds are getting smarter. I've seen a crow toss a bunch of shit into a paper bowl and take off with it, and there's that article about one picking a gauge of wire and bending it into a hook to retrieve a bucket from a tube.
krazed
Admiral of the Bathtub
+619|7207|Great Brown North

unnamednewbie13 wrote:

krazed wrote:

man, that would stink after a few days :\

i would have so much fun shooting the seagulls that are going to be there eating
Careful, birds are getting smarter. I've seen a crow toss a bunch of shit into a paper bowl and take off with it, and there's that article about one picking a gauge of wire and bending it into a hook to retrieve a bucket from a tube.
yeah ive seen that too, creepy birds:\ we need to put an end to the uprising before it begins!
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,072|7199|PNW

krazed wrote:

unnamednewbie13 wrote:

krazed wrote:

man, that would stink after a few days :\

i would have so much fun shooting the seagulls that are going to be there eating
Careful, birds are getting smarter. I've seen a crow toss a bunch of shit into a paper bowl and take off with it, and there's that article about one picking a gauge of wire and bending it into a hook to retrieve a bucket from a tube.
yeah ive seen that too, creepy birds:\ we need to put an end to the uprising before it begins!
I'd worry about the robots first.

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