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20 bodies recovered after California boat fire

A pair of diving fins and flowers at a memorial wall near the Truth Aquatics moorings in Santa Barbara
A pair of diving fins and flowers at a memorial wall near the Truth Aquatics moorings in Santa Barbara

Twenty bodies have been recovered after a scuba diving boat caught fire and sank off the California coast.

As many as six additional victims have been sighted trapped in the wreckage.

Search efforts were suspended this morning after no further survivors were found, coast guard captain Monica Rochester told a news conference.

Five crew members were rescued following the disaster yesterday.

"Today we will begin the process of mapping DNA profiles of the 20 victims that we have recovered so far, so that they can be compared with family samples that will be collected commencing today and in the days to come," said Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown.

The fire broke out aboard the Conception, a 23-metre boat commercial diving boat, while it was moored just off the shore of Santa Cruz Island, the US Coast Guard said in a statement.

Passengers slept in the ship's lower quarters, officials said, while five crew members who were above deck on the bridge escaped.

The Coast Guard searched the coastline of Santa Cruz Island for any other possible survivors but had not found anyone, officials said.

"This isn't a day that we wanted to wake up to for Labor Day and it's a very tragic event," Coast Guard Captain Monica Rochester told a news conference.

"We will search all the way through the night into the morning but I think we all should be prepared to move into the worst outcome," she said.

Four bodies were recovered from the area and rescue divers found another four bodies on the ocean floor near the sunken vessel, which lies upside down under more than 18m of water, Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown told reporters.

"Fire is the scourge of any ship," he said, and to be in a remote location, asleep and then have a fire spread very quickly, "you couldn't ask for a worse situation".

The Conception, which launched in 1981, embarked for California's Channel Islands on Saturday morning with 39 people on board.

Authorities are trying to determine the best way to recover the sunken vessel, including the possibility of towing it to shore, Sheriff Brown added.

The surviving crew members sought refuge on a fishing boat moored a few hundred feet away, banging on the side to wake up Bob Hansen and his wife, who were sleeping onboard.

"When we looked out, the other boat was totally engulfed in flames, from stem to stern," Mr Hansen said in an interview with the New York Times.

"There were these explosions every few beats. You can't prepare yourself for that. It was horrendous."

Scuba or propane tanks on the Conception may have exploded in the fire, but that had not been confirmed, Sheriff Brown said, adding it was unclear if there was an initial explosion that caused the fire.

After borrowing clothes from the Hansens, some crew members headed back toward the Conception to look for survivors without luck, Mr Hansen said.

Actor Rob Lowe offered his condolences for those on board, saying he had been on the Conception many times.

US Senator Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat who represents California, called for an investigation.

"It's inconceivable that with all the safety regulations we have in place today, a fire on a boat can lead to the loss of life we saw this morning," she said in a statement.

"And we need to understand exactly how the crew was trained and, if they were awake and above-deck, why they were unable to alert or help rescue passengers."

Investigators said a single mayday call came from the boat reporting the fire.

"It happened quickly enough so many people could not get off," US Coast Guard Lieutenant Commander Matthew Kroll told CNN.

The diving boat was chartered by Worldwide Diving Adventures, a Santa Barbara, California, excursion firm.

It said on its website that the Conception was on a three-day excursion to the Channel Islands and was due back in Santa Barbara yesterday.