TENS OF thousands of marine animals have been washed up along the UK’s east coast following the cold temperatures and rough weather over the last week.

Crabs, starfish, mussels and lobsters are ankle-deep in places along the Holderness coast in Yorkshire. Most of the animals are now dead – except for lobsters, which Yorkshire conservationists have been working alongside local fisherman to rescue, by gathering them in buckets and taking them to tanks to recover, with the aim of putting them back in the sea when the weather improves.

Similar scenes have been reported down the North Sea coast including Norfolk and Kent.

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust's Bex Lynam said: “There was a three degree drop in sea temperature last week which will have caused animals to hunker down and reduce their activity levels. This makes them vulnerable to rough seas – they became dislodged by large waves and washed ashore when the rough weather kicked in. Larger animals such as dolphins are more mobile and can save themselves by swimming away when this sort of thing happens.

“Lobsters are one of the few species still alive – that’s why we’re saving them with local fisherman. This area is very important for shellfish and we work alongside fisherman to promote sustainable fisheries and protect reproductive stocks. It’s worth saving them so that they can be put back into the sea and continue to breed."

Wildlife trust living seas officer Dr Lissa Batey said: “We can’t prevent natural disasters like this – but we can mitigate against declining marine life and the problems that humans cause by creating enough protected areas at sea and by ensuring that these sites are large enough and close enough to offer fish, crustaceans, dolphins and other marine life the protection they require to withstand natural events such as this."