Up
to 100,000 dead fish in Nevada marina a mystery
State
wildlife officials are trying to figure out why all the fish have
died in a northern Nevada marina where the stocked fishery has
flourished since the man-made lake was created nearly 15 years ago.
16
January, 2014
As
many as 100,000 trout, bass and catfish have died over the past month
in the Sparks Marina along U.S. Interstate 80 east of Reno,
apparently the result of a dramatic, unexplained drop in dissolved
oxygen levels, Nevada Department of Wildlife spokesman Chris Healy
said Wednesday.
Scientists
say a bitter cold snap could have caused oxygen-poor waters to rise
from the old rock quarry's bottom to the surface, but they don't
understand what sparked the massive die-off.
Fish
biologists confirmed low oxygen levels caused the death of an
estimated 3,000 fish in one corner of the lake in mid-December but
Healy said they thought at the time the event was localized and of
limited impact. Since then, they've been unable to detect any live
fish in the 77-acre lake. Numerous dead fish have been removed from
the lake's shoreline and Healy said it's likely the rest sank to the
bottom.
"The
100,000 dead fish figure is something that is probably a pretty
conservative guess," said Healy, who estimates they've stocked
close to 1 million adult fish in the lake since they started in 1998.
"We
don't know if any small fish have survived, but for all intents and
purposes, the fishery doesn't exist anymore," he told The
Associated Press.
The
Reno Gazette-Journal first reported scientists determined the problem
was much more serious than they realized after a boat survey on
Monday found dissolved oxygen levels far too low to support the fish
at 11 different sampling locations. Readings from an electronic
fish-finder also revealed no fish swimming in the lake's depths.
Lakes
like the marina consist of different layers of water temperatures,
with the warmest water on top holding the highest oxygen content,
Healy said. He said one theory is that the surface water may have
chilled very quickly, sank toward the bottom of the lake and stirred
up material on its floor, causing a "violent turnover" that
could have sucked up additional oxygen.
"Everything
is a theory right now," Healy said.
Sparks
city spokesman Adam Mayberry emphasized there's no health or safety
threat at the marina. He said the water typically is of good quality
and no similar problems have occurred before.
"Even
with the biological anomaly we are seeing, it's still a very safe
body of water," he said. "You just can't fish in the marina
right now because there aren't any fish there, and we are trying to
figure out why."
The
Sparks Marina opened in 2000, with a 2-mile walking and bike trail,
beaches, playgrounds, picnic areas and a fishing pier. The former
aggregate pit operated by Helms Construction Co. had been found to be
contaminated in 1988 by pollutants leaking from an adjacent tank
farm, but state environmental officials said all the pollution had
been cleaned up before a 1997 New Year's Day flood sent Truckee River
waters into the pit.
Michael
Drinkwater, manager of the Truckee Meadows Wastewater Reclamation
Facility which collects water from the lake, is awaiting results of
new toxicity tests conducted last week but said routine testing has
revealed no problems before.
"There's
no obvious indication hydrocarbon pollution could be associated with
the die-off," he told the Gazette-Journal.
Healy
said testing earlier this week found dissolved oxygen levels in the
range of 1.1 to 1.9 parts per million. Fish do best with levels in
the range of 7 to 9 parts per million and typically can't survive
when it drops below 5 parts per million, he said.
The
department annually stocks the marina in late February or early March
1, but he said they won't be doing that this year unless the
dissolved oxygen level "makes a big recovery."
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