Sea critters cover sand in colour
A BIG stranding of tiny, colourful crustaceans at Te Rauone Beach, on Otago Harbour, could be a sign of a return to the more regular summer strandings of red krill which were more common 10 years ago.
Marine biologist and former director of the University of Otago’s Portobello marine laboratory John Jillet said this stranding, affecting part of the beach near Harington Point on Otago Peninsula, was a more expected event than a much bigger stranding which took place last May.
Observers said the gregarious squat lobsters, Munida gregaria, were yesterday concentrated in a 50sq m area at the southwest end of the beach, and also in a 2mwide band extending northeast along another part of the beach.
The krill seen yesterday was ‘‘an extremely important part of the food web’’ for many fish and birds, including penguins, Dr Jillet said.
The krill that washed up this week had been living outside the harbour mouth on the nearby continental shelf, but may have been sucked into the harbour about two weeks ago before washing up, he said.
This had been part of a normal pattern 10 years and more ago, but such strandings had become less common.
The latest krill were much younger than the krill washed up in much bigger strandings last May, Dr Jillet said.
On May 14 last year, bigger strandings of the same krill species on the coast near Portobello had been highly unusual, and had not been seen there in late autumn for at least 20 years, he said.
On that occasion, the reddish remains of washedup krill were visible in several places, including Broad Bay, Edwards Bay and on the coast just north of Portobello.
This stranding of the freeswimming form of the species may have been among the biggest since they were studied near Portobello in 1976.