Earlier last week thousands of marine life began washing up around Russia’s north-eastern Kamchatka region. The first signs that something was wrong began at the picturesque Khalaktyrsky beach, a popular tourist and surfing spot, became apparent when people started to develop symptoms after taking a dive in the ocean. “For weeks now, all surfers have been experiencing eye problems after coming back from the water,” Yekaterina Dyba, an administrator at a local surf school, wrote on social media on Thursday. She added that the swimmers felt “a decrease in vision,” as well as fever, nausea, and a sore throat.
Now the mystery has deepened as shocked officials have learned that the death toll in the oceans around Russia’s north-eastern Kamchatka region have increased sharply after scientists discovered that nearly 100 per cent of all organisms living on the seabed of the peninsula’s Avacha Bay has died. According to RT, the alarm was raised last weekend when piles of sea life began washing up on Kamchatka’s beaches. Pictures of dead octopi, crabs, and starfish went viral on Russian social media, and local surfers reported that they’d experienced problems with their eyes after being in the water.
“After diving, I can confirm that this is an environmental disaster,”said Alexander Korobok, an underwater photographer. “The ecosystem has been damaged significantly, and this will have quite long-term consequences since everything in nature is interconnected.”
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