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Friday, July 30, 1999 Published at 22:10 GMT 23:10 UK
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Special Report
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Sea urchins may have committed suicide

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Council workmen have begun clearing up beaches in west Wales that have been swamped with dead and dying shellfish.

More sea urchins and other tiny shellfish have been swept ashore at adjoining Broad Haven and Little Haven beaches in St Brides Bay, Pembrokeshire and in some places the golden sands were inches deep in empty shells.

Workmen from Pembrokeshire County Council used two machines to try to sweep the beaches clean.

Marine biologists say the most likely cause of the unusual occurance is red algae and the recent warm spell - although mass suicide has not been ruled as a cause.

  • A tropical sunfish washed up in north Wales is being nursed back to health in a warm indoor pool on a diet of Sainsbury's mussels.

    Chances of survival for Solero looked grim after he was blown off course in the Gulf Stream and ended up in a tidal pool at Beaumaris, Anglesey.

    But after a lifeboat rescue, the endearing creature - which looks like a giant head, and has a parrot-like beak, no tail and two giant dorsal fins - is settling down to life at the Blue Planet Aquarium in Ellesmere Port, Cheshire.

    The two foot long fish is enjoying 100gm of fresh mussels a day from the local supermarket.

    Mussels will be on the menu for the next few weeks, before cockles, sprats and spinach will be added to the diet, which is rather more up-market than its usual fare of jellyfish.

    Solero is being given round-the-clock attention and has been placed on a course of antibiotics.

    Staff at the aquarium will be attempting to rehabilitate Solero for release next year, before he gets too big for his new home.

    Curator Colin Grist said: "It's called a sunfish because in the wild it floats on its side as if it is sunbathing. It's also sometimes called a headfish because it looks just like one big head. Its fins let it drift in ocean currents. Quite often people think it's a shark because of the big dorsal fin.

    "At the moment its chances of survival aren't too bad. There are other aquariums who have kept them alive, it's certainly got more chance than in the Irish Sea."

    Marine experts believe global warming and warm waters may have brought Solero further north than normal, where he became tired and stopped feeding.



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