Environment

Thousands of dead anchovies wash up on the beach in Cayucos. Here’s what happened

Beachgoers near the Cayucos Pier were faced with a startling sight on Aug. 17 — masses of dead anchovies washed up on the shore, driven there by a feeding frenzy in the ocean nearby.

According to Danna Dykstra-Coy, who captured video and photos of the scene, the swath of fish stretched out on both sides of the pier, reaching north to about D Street.

She estimated that there were perhaps thousands of the anchovies on the beach, with many more still swarming in the surf.

That school of fish attracted many seabirds, Dykstra-Coy said.

“Massive balls of bait fish were chased by hordes of brown pelicans on a feeding frenzy to shore,” she told The Tribune in an email. “Many anchovies attempting to escape the stream of dive-bombing birds ended up on the beach.”

When a school of bait fish like that gathers in a tight sphere, usually to avoid nearby predators, it also attracts sea mammals, including whales and dolphins. At that point, it’s called a bait ball.

Hundreds of pelicans feed on anchovies after driving a bait ball toward the shore in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022.
Hundreds of pelicans feed on anchovies after driving a bait ball toward the shore in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022. Danna Dykstra-Coy dannajoyimages.com

In 30 years of living in Cayucos, Dykstra-Coy said it was the first time she’s seen such a phenomenon there.

Apparently, die-off incidents like that happen when too many fish try to occupy too small an area of water and wind up depleting the oxygen in the sea.

While uncommon in Cayucos, bait-fish die-offs happen occasionally elsewhere.

In July, Bay Area newspapers reported about a similar incident in a Bolinas lagoon.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle,“anchovies swim in schools, and the theory is that a large one was pushed into the lagoon by birds and then trapped by its sand bar. “

“With so many fish stuck in a relatively small body of water, there wasn’t enough oxygen, which killed the fish and stranded them on shore,” Samantha Haimovitch, a superintendent with Marin County Parks, which manages the lagoon, told the Chronicle.

Anchovies swim in a bait ball in the waters off Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, after sea birds drove fish onto the shore.
Anchovies swim in a bait ball in the waters off Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, after sea birds drove fish onto the shore. Danna Dykstra-Coy dannajoyimages.com
Hundreds of pelicans feed on anchovies after driving a bait ball toward the shore in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022.
Hundreds of pelicans feed on anchovies after driving a bait ball toward the shore in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022. Danna Dykstra-Coy dannajoyimages.com
Dead anchovies lie on the beach in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, after sea birds drove a bait ball onto the shore.
Dead anchovies lie on the beach in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, after sea birds drove a bait ball onto the shore. Danna Dykstra-Coy dannajoyimages.com
Dead anchovies lie on the beach in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, after sea birds drove a bait ball onto the shore.
Dead anchovies lie on the beach in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, after sea birds drove a bait ball onto the shore.
Dead anchovies lie on the beach in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, after sea birds drove a bait ball onto the shore.
Dead anchovies lie on the beach in Cayucos on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2022, after sea birds drove a bait ball onto the shore. Danna Dykstra-Coy dannajoyimages.com

This story was originally published August 18, 2022 at 1:03 PM.

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Kathe Tanner
The Tribune
Kathe Tanner has been writing about the people and places of SLO County’s North Coast since 1981, first as a columnist and then also as a reporter. Her career has included stints as a bakery owner, public relations director, radio host, trail guide and jewelry designer. She has been a resident of Cambria for more than four decades, and if it’s happening in town, Kathe knows about it.
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