BALTIMORE COUNTY, Md. (WBFF) - About 6,000 fish were found to have
died in eastern Baltimore County waterways, according to a Maryland
Department of the Environment investigation.
Preliminary results
point to algae-created toxins as the likely cause of the fish kill,
which was discovered last week after dead fish were first seen in rivers
that include the Gunpowder and Bird, said MDE spokesperson Jay Apperson
Monday evening.
The kill has affected at least nine species:
yellow perch, largemouth bass, bluegill sunfish, pumpkinseed sunfish,
carp, black crappie, gizzard shad, spottail shiner and channel catfish.
Residents are urged to avoid the dead fish or wash their hands if they need to handle or dispose of the fish.
A
department investigator who is on site today in response to the
received reports "saw fish that continue to show signs of stress,"
Apperson said.
The investigation has not shown any signs of
pollution as a potential cause, suggesting instead that the kill is due
to toxins produced by algae, he said.
"Monitoring has shown
elevated cell counts of Karlodinium venifecum algae in the Gunpowder
River," Apperson said. "We are awaiting results of laboratory tests for
algae toxins and of fish tissue. The investigation is ongoing."
Apperson
noted fish kills are relatively common and vary widely in size. MDE
reports 86 fish kills in 2015, and it counts 55 fish kills of 100,000 or
more fish since Maryland began investigating the issue in 1984.
Anyone
with information on fish kills or with other concerns on environmental
matters involving the Chesapeake Bay or its tributaries should call the
Bay environmental hotline at 877-224-7229. Fox News
No comments:
Post a Comment