Storm Emma aftermath: Dead fish washed up on Yorkshire beach
Beachgoers were left shocked after a devastating scene of millions of sea creatures from fish to lobsters washed up on the shore.Big tides and gale force winds from Storm Emma are believed to have caused the huge dump of animals along the East Yorkshire coast.Shocking pictures from Fraisthorpe beach near Bridlington show tonnes of the creatures on the shore, with many people coming and filling buckets and boxes and carrying them away.It comes after tens of thousands of dead starfish were also washed up at Ramsgate in Kent following the severe weather, with witnesses saying the scene looked 'like the armageddon'.Commercial fisherman Jack Sanderson was at Fraisthorpe with a group of fishermen rescuing live lobsters to release back into the sea.He said: 'It was just like a war zone, total chaos.There was every form of marine life; velvet crabs, lobsters, whelks, scallops, razorfish, Dover soles, cod, ling, wrasse and sand eels.'We have had strong easterly winds up to force nine and combined with a 6.2metre tide, and the fact there was a lot of cold, frost and snow, meant the water temperature dropped two degrees in one day, which is massive.'The combination just stunned everything and the direction of the wind has brought it onto the beach.It is still coming out of the sea; every tide is leaving a fresh batch.' Mr Sanderson said he had been frustrated by the actions of some members of the public who had been taking under-sized live lobsters off the beach, or those carrying eggs, which is against regulations.'Don't get me wrong - we earn our living from the sea.But the regulations are there for everybody and it's only us who comply.We will hopefully release some of the lobsters tomorrow.We will go out five or six miles and let them go.' Mr Sanderson said he was hopeful the amount of sealife seen on the beach was a reflection of healthy stocks and the natural disaster would not prove 'totally catastrophic' for the industry.The lobsters they picked up have been taken to tanks at Bridlington harbour, where they will be kept until they can be put back into the sea.Jason Harrison, skipper of the Scarborough shellfishing boat Shannon, added: 'There were hundreds of thousands of lobsters, millions of mussels, you can't count the number.'The number of velvets was scary.I'd say 80 to 90 percent of the lobsters were dead.This is the third time I have seen it in 30 years.It is nature, it happened before and it will happen again.