| The strangest    stowaways yet have arrived on U.S. shores via debris possibly from the 2011 Japan tsunami: Live fish. The fish, which live off    the coast of Japan and Hawaii, apparently made    their way across the Pacific in a drifting 18-foot (5.5 meter) skiff. Of the    five fish that made the journey, one is still alive and is being kept at the    Seaside Aquarium in Oregon. "These fish could    have been originally from Japanese waters, or they could have been picked up    going close by the Hawaii coast," said Allen Pleus,    the aquatic invasive species coordinator at the    Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. This is the first time    live vertebrates (animals with backbones) have been found in tsunami debris. A fishy discovery When the devastating    tsunami hit Japan in March 2011, it dragged    some 5 million tons of debris into the Pacific Ocean, according to Japanese government estimates. Most of this likely    sunk immediately, but approximately 1.5 million tons floated away from    Japan's coastlines. No one knows how much of    that is still adrift, but pieces of tsunami debris    have been washing ashore in Alaska, British Columbia and along the U.S.    West Coast and Hawaiian islands ever since. Some of this debris has harbored    potential invasive species, most notably two floating docks that beached in    Washington and Oregon.  But those docks held    plant life and invertebrates such as limpets and barnacles. Fish, much less    live ones, are a rare find. The fish were found in a back compartment of a    small fiberglass boat called the Saisho-Maru, which was discovered March 22    near Long Beach, Wash. The Japanese government    has not yet confirmed that the skiff was lost in the tsunami, but it has a    registration number from the region where the wave hit, Pleus told LiveScience. The boat floated partially submerged    with its stern a few feet under the ocean's surface, and the lidless    compartment became a "little cave" where the fish could hide, Pleus    said. The boat also hosted    algae, several crabs, marine worms, a sea cucumber (never found before on    other debris, Pleus said), scallops and blue mussels. All told, it was a    perfect mini-ecosystem for the stowaway fish.  "In this particular    case, the water conditions were right and the boat landed upright and was    basically washed ashore," Pleus said. "It had a nice 20- to    30-gallon aquarium intact in the back." A local found the boat    and scooped up one of the fish, taking it to Long Beach's City Hall. City    officials got in touch with Washington Fish and Wildlife biologists, who    euthanized the rest of the fish for study. The survivor stayed at city hall    until officials there called in Keith Chandler, the general manager of the    Seaside Aquarium in Seaside, Ore. The 5-inch-long (12    centimeters) fish "was in a bucket in their office, and they didn't know    what to do with it," Chandler told LiveScience. Chandler identified    the fish as a striped beakfish (Oplegnathus    fasciatus), also known as a barred knifejaw. Striped beakfish    live in reefs off Japan and are rarely spotted in other tropical waters. Invasive species    threat The surviving fish is now    in a quarantine tank at the Seaside Aquarium, where staff are trying to get    it to eat, Chandler said. He's hoping to put the fish on display with    permission from Oregon's Department of Fish and Wildlife. "We're trying    different things to feed it," he said. The rest of the fish were    sent to Oregon State University, where biologists will analyze their ear    bones to determine their age and also look at their stomach contents and    reproductive status. "The reproductive    status and age will help us figure out if they rode the entire way from Japan    starting over 2 years ago, or most likely they came from Hawaii," Pleus    said. Even from Hawaii, the fish would have survived a journey of nearly    3,000 miles (4,828 km).  It's unlikely that any    fish that escaped the boat will survive in the cool waters off the Washington    and Oregon coastlines, Pleus said. Had the boat landed further south, it's    possible the fish could have established themselves. The fish discovery    changes the way biologists will have to think about invasive    species from Japanese debris, Pleus said. At first, scientists assumed    that no species would survive a more than 5,000-mile (8,047 km) journey    across the Pacific. When the docks laden with marine life washed up in    Washington and Oregon, they realized they were wrong. But researchers still    thought that to support life, an object would have had to have been sitting    in the water, accumulating an ecosystem, before the tsunami hit. The newly    discovered skiff and other small finds suggest this isn't the case, Pleus    said. "A lot of these    species were attached after the tsunami, while it was still in Japanese    coastal waters," he said. "There are a lot of larvae that are    floating around looking for something solid to attach to." Finally, researchers have    believed that only big objects, such as docks, could support enough life to    support a robust colony, Pleus said. The boat torpedoes that theory, too. "You get these sort    of Noah's Arks of large docks that come in with huge assemblages of species,    and they're definitely a threat," he said. "But when you look at    the number of smaller debris with fewer organisms, if you put it all    together, it's an equal or possibly even greater threat than the really large    objects that come to shore." Copyright    2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This    material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. | 
YOUR COMMENT
