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Dozens of octopuses spotted crawling out of the sea on Welsh beach

Experts say phenomenon may have been caused by recent storms

Samuel Osborne
Monday 30 October 2017 04:07 EDT
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Around 20 octopusess were seen on dry land in New Quay, Ceredigon
Around 20 octopusess were seen on dry land in New Quay, Ceredigon (SeaMor Dolphin Watching Boat Trips New Quay)

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Dozens of octopuses have been spotted crawling out of the water and making their way up a beach in Wales.

Around 20 of the sea creatures were seen on dry land in New Quay, Ceredigon, on Friday night, and more had been seen the night before.

Brett Stones, who runs SeaMor Dolphin Watching Boat Trips, caught one live curled octopus on camera and photographed several others which had died.

“They were coming out of the water and crawling up the beach. We don’t quite know what’s causing it," Mr Stones told Wales Online.

“Perhaps it’s because the sea has been quite rough recently but I’ve never seen anything like it before. They were walking on the tips of their legs.

“A friend of mine said it happened the night before and there was about 20 last night.”

He said he helped return them to the water.

Some experts said the phenomenon may have been caused by recent storms that battered the Irish Sea.

James Wright, curator at the National Marine Aquarium in Plymouth, told the Daily Telegraph the number of octopuses found was "quite odd" and suggested there was "something wrong with them."

He told the paper: “As the areas where they are exhibiting this odd behaviour coincides with the two areas hit by the two recent low pressures depressions and associated storms of Ophelia and Brian, it could be supposed that these have affected them.

“It could simply be injuries sustained by the rough weather itself or there could be a sensitivity to a change in atmospheric pressure.”

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