6/7/2006
For Immediate Release
Contact
Bill Hayden, DEQ, 804-698-4447
Julia Dixon, DGIF, 804-367-0991
TASK FORCE INVESTIGATES LATEST FISH INCIDENTS IN SHENANDOAH
RIVER WATERSHED
Richmond, VA — The Shenandoah River Fish Kill Task Force is
investigating ongoing reports of fish deaths and fish with lesions in the
Shenandoah watershed during spring 2006.
In the North Fork Shenandoah, numerous smallmouth bass and sunfish with
lesions have been found and a significant number have died. The cause is
unknown. These problems began in March and continued through May in the
lower North Fork, generally downstream of the Woodstock area. There also was
a brief fish kill involving smallmouth bass and sunfish in the lower South
River near Grottoes in April.
The task force has received no reports of fish deaths in the South Fork
Shenandoah this spring. During fish collections in late May, however, about
20 percent of smallmouth bass and sunfish on the South Fork were found with
lesions. The Department of Game and Inland Fisheries and the Department of
Environmental Quality will continue to monitor these species.
Also in late May, a large number of northern hogsuckers died in the mainstem
Shenandoah between the Route 7 and Route 50 bridges in Clarke County. The
task force is investigating the cause of this fish kill and has collected
dead and live fish for examination. Though there were no lesions on the dead
hogsuckers, the task force did find lesions on redhorse suckers, some
smallmouth bass and some sunfish.
The U.S. Geological Survey is studying these fish at its laboratory in
Leetown, W.Va., and is conducting fish health studies on samples collected
earlier from the Shenandoah fish kills.
The task force also is working with fishery and environmental agencies in
West Virginia in Maryland, where fish kills involving suckers have been
reported this spring on the South Branch of the Potomac and the mainstem
Potomac. Most of the dead fish have been redhorse suckers, though some
northern hogsuckers also have died. These kills are similar in timing and
types of fish to the one on the Shenandoah River in May.
The task force, let by DEQ and DGIF, continues to pursue a number of
investigations into water quality and fish health. Preliminary results from
these studies have not identified a specific cause of the fish kills, but
they suggest that several stress factors affecting fish may be involved. The
task force is developing a plan and budget request for continuing this work
through 2007.
The task force encourages anyone seeing unusual conditions or problems with
fish to contact the DEQ Valley Regional Office at (540) 574-7800. For more
information, contact task force co-chairs Don Kain, DEQ, at (540) 574-7815
or Steve Reeser, DGIF, at (540) 248-9360.
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