If you aren't paying attention you should be.
NUCLEAR CLASS CATACLYSM:
FISH ARE DYING *EVERYWHERE*!!
The Rumor Mill News Reading
Room
http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=77150
Posted By: Esclarmonde
Date: Sunday, 21 August 2005, 8:05 p.m.
In Response To:
EYEWITNESS REPORT: THE GULF OF MEXICO IS DEAD! WHY? (Esclarmonde)
WHAT IS REMOVING OXYGEN FROM THE
WATERS? Chemtrail chemicals? Or is someone spraying to
remove every living thing from this planet? When you
wipe out huge pieces of the 'food chain', you are in
effect giving ALL living species on this planet a 'death
sentence'. Please don't tell me this is so somebody can
'patent' fish and sell us that part of our diet as well.
(They have recently requested a patent on pigs and we
know they are attempting to make owning natural seeds a
crime) Cause there won't be anybody left to buy the
products.
***************************************
Received in e-mail
-------------------------------
From the sky, a sea of white is
covering the mouth of the Colorado River. Upon closer
look, you´ll see dead fish – millions of them.
"Unbelievable if you haven´t seen it before," said
Matagorda County Commissioner George Deshotel.
The stunning images of devastation
run for miles. It´s one of the largest fish kills people
in the town of Matagorda have seen in years.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
11 MILLION SALMON MISSING
Warm waters blamed for disappearance
of sockeye
CTV.ca News Staff
In the few places on the B.C. coast
where sockeye salmon fishing is allowed, boats are
coming back to port empty or near-empty this summer, as
the annual sockeye run has so far failed to materialize.
The Skeena sockeye run, initially
forecast to be 1.2 million fish, has been about half
that number. There are also low numbers on the Fraser
and Nass Rivers.
On the Fraser River, 11 million
salmon were predicted to return, but the peak last
weekend saw about 100,000 fish.
Because of the crisis, the commercial
fishery has yet to open and the native fishery has been
restricted.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Pennsylvania
Fish kill merits top priority
Tuesday, August 09, 2005
It should be unsettling to more than
just anglers that unusual numbers of young smallmouth
bass are being found dead in sections of the Susquehanna
and Juniata rivers.
Specifically, biologists and anglers
are finding large numbers of dying or dead fish with
skin lesions downstream from Lewistown in the Juniata
and downstream from Sunbury to below Harrisburg in the
Susquehanna.
The Pennsylvania Fish and Boat
Commission has attributed the problem to a bacterial
infection, but the source of that bacteria remains a
mystery. Fortunately, the commission says the bacteria
-- columnaris, which is caused by environmental or
nutritional factors -- posts no threat to humans.
But it´s nevertheless troubling that
dead fish are turning up on some of the best bass
fishing waters in the United States, and waters used for
various recreational purposes and in some cases drinking
water in our backyard. And while the smallmouth are the
afflicted at the moment, the bacteria can be picked up
by other freshwater species; they have been found in
smaller numbers on white suckers in the same waters.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Louisiana
Environmentalists hope to find cause of massive fish
kill in Bayou Lacombe
03:56 PM CDT on Wednesday, August 10, 2005
Dave McNamara / WWL-TV Reporter
Environmentalists are looking into
what's causing thousands of dead fish to turn up on the
Northshore in Bayou Lacombe.
The Lake Pontchartrain Basin
Foundation agreed with Glockner that a fish kill of this
size, involving these types of fish, is usually an
indicator that something is wrong.
The dead fish, mostly shad and
pogies, began popping up last week on both sides of the
Bayou, as far as three-quarters of a mile from the bayou
basin, according to local fisherman and restaurateur
Cliff Glockner.
“I seen about a hundred,
hundred-fifty thousand right here on the top of the
water. All stressed, getting ready to die,” Glockner
said. “This is the fourth fish kill in a week and a
half. It started last Monday and it went for about two
days up the bayou. But as the water fell at night, it
progressively moved down to a stretch about half-a-mile
long.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
South Dakota
Posted on Tue, Aug. 09, 2005
Fisheries officials looking into dead
white bass
Associated Press
PIERRE, S.D. - State fisheries
officials have been investigating unusually high numbers
of dead white bass washing ashore on Lake Oahe during
the past week.
Robert Hanten, a fisheries biologist
with the Game, Fish and Parks Department, said white
bass die-offs are unfortunate and messy, but not
unprecedented in South Dakota. They've happened in the
past on Lake Sharpe and Lake Francis Case, as well as in
other parts of the country, he said.
"It is not uncommon to see a few dead
fish on a normal day on the water," Hanten said in a
release. "But when we get reports of hundreds of dead
fish, an investigation is necessary."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Texas
Millions of fish dead near Matagorda
Associated Press
MATAGORDA - Millions of small fish have died in the
waters of Matagorda Harbor, the Intracoastal Canal and
Colorado River in what some in this small coastal
community are calling one of the largest local fish
kills in recent years.
Recent hot, windless weather has
increased water temperatures and lowered the amount of
oxygen water can hold, said John O´Connell, Matagorda
County marine extension agent.
Sunlight helps microscopic algae in
the water produce oxygen. Menhaden, a small bait fish,
feed off of the algae and are drawn to the waters in
large numbers, O´Connell said.
The demand for oxygen has exceeded production, and the
fish have died and risen to the surface, said Willie
Younger, a marine education specialist with the Texas
A&M Marine Advisory Service.
(snip)
Fish kills are a natural process but
rarely reach the magnitude seen this week, Younger said.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Florida
Gulf of Mexico mystery
Wednesday, August 10, 2005
About 20 dead sea turtles have washed
ashore in Pinellas County in the past three days, an
extremely high number that has doctors and scientists
puzzled.
Dive instructor Michael Miller took
underwater video to try to figure out the mystery.
"Right now, anywhere we go from shore
to 20 miles offshore, from Sarasota to Tarpon Springs,
we can´t find a single creature alive on the bottom
right now," said Miller.
Miller says he´s never seen such
death and devastation under water in his 20 years of
diving.
"All the coral, all the sponges, all
the crabs, not a single living thing, all the star fish,
the brittle stars, everything´s dead," said Miller.
~~~~~~~~~
Florida
Red Tide's Gone; Dead Fish Aren't
By DAVID SOMMER
Published: Aug 9, 2005
CLEARWATER - When marine researchers
issued a favorable red tide update Friday, they forgot
to tell the fish.
All weekend, dead fish continued to
wash up on some area beaches, local officials said.
``Red tide is a living organism. ...
What you are seeing today could be totally different´´
from what was reported last week, said Jeremy Lake,
spokesman for the state Fish and Wildlife Research
Institute in St. Petersburg.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Minnesota
Heat kills thousands of fish on
Pebble Lake
By Brandon Stahl
Alan Lunde was boating on Pebble Lake
with a colleague on Saturday, July 16, when the two
noticed at least two dozen dead fish floating on the
water. The next day, Alan and his wife, Carolyn, went
out and saw anywhere from 500 to 800.
By Monday night, the residents along
the north and east shore of the lake were dealing with a
massive fish kill, having to clean up anywhere from
2,000 to 3,000 fish.
"It's never happened before, and
it's
never happened since," said Steve Rufer, who has lived
on the lake since 2003 and from 1991 to 1998.
Thermal stress
The lake's tullibee, a species of
cold water fish related to trout and salmon, died off
from the warm water temperatures, according to Arlin
Schalekamp, the DNR´s Area Fisheries Manager.
Schalekamp said the tullibee need to
swim in colder water with higher oxygen levels, but the
summer's hot temperatures depleted the oxygen levels,
forcing the fish to swim toward the surface where they
died from thermal stress.
"It's fairly common," Schalekamp
said. "We see it just about every year where we have one
or two lakes that have these tullibee."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Illinois
Fish at VanWinkle Lake dying from
lack of oxygen, other woes
By LARRY ESKRIDGE/of the Daily Ledger
Wednesday, August 10, 2005 11:25 AM
CDT
Approximately two weeks ago local
residents reported a large number of dead fish floating
on Van Winkle Lake near Wallace Park.
Rob Hilsbeck of the Illinois
Department of Natural Resources said the fish kill was
caused by the low oxygen content of the water, brought
on by the low water level and the high temperatures. He
added that algae blooms also contributed to the problem,
and that the lake was not a good habitat because of the
high siltation.
Hilsbeck went on to say that the situation was
aggravated by the drought conditions. He noted that the
heat made a situation where the water could not hold
oxygen, and that it could be made worse by a sudden cold
front or a brief rain.
Hilsbeck also said the larger fish,
because they needed more oxygen, were the first to die.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Oregon
’Dead zone’ may be developing on
Oregon coast
August 8, 2005
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Starving birds
and fewer fish along the Oregon coast are a warning sign
that another seasonal “dead zone” may be developing as a
result of global warming, biologists say.
No one is sure why it happened. But
leading scientists at Oregon State University blame
steadily rising sea temperatures, which increasingly
appears tied to human-caused global warming.
“The oceans are generally warming up,
and there are all sorts of signs that something strange
is afoot,” said Ronald Neilson, an Oregon State
professor and U.S. Forest Service researcher who
specializes in climate. “It’s not new to have change
happen. It’s how suddenly it’s happening.”
A record 181 adult murres turned up
dead on a 4.6-mile stretch of beach just south of
Newport in July, more than in any other month in the 28
years teams have surveyed the stretch.
Brandt’s cormorants, another fishing
bird, have washed up dead at rates 50 to 80 times those
of previous years, said Julia Parrish, a University of
Washington professor who leads a coastal bird survey.
“It’s just awful,” said William
Sydeman, director of marine ecology for the Point Reyes
Bird Observatory in California. “It’s just as bad as
we’ve ever seen it.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
South Wales
Posted on: Monday, 8 August 2005,
06:00 CDT
Fish Are Killed By Chemical in River
An investigation has been launched
after thousands of fish were wiped out by a mystery
pollutant - for the second time in a year. More than
20,000 fish, mostly young salmon and trout, were found
dead in the River Ebbw, in the Crumlin area this week.
Environment Agency officers were
alerted on Monday about a mystery chemical being
discharged into the river from a drainage culvert.
The pollutant is believed to be some
form of detergent which left other wildlife and
invertebrates unharmed.
By the time it had reached Cwmcarn it
had lost its power to kill, but had already affected
four miles of the river.
John Gregory, the agency´s
environment manager is appealing for information and
help in tracing the pollution source.
He said: ´It´s heartbreaking to see
so many fish killed for the second time in a year. We
had a similar pollution last August, but were unable to
find the source, even with the help of the local
authority in searching the drainage system.´
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Indonesia
Bekasi seeks cause of dead fish
City News - August 10, 2005
BEKASI: The Bekasi Council urged the
Environmental Management Agency to investigate the death
of thousands of fish in Kali Bekasi river since Sunday,
suspecting untreated industrial waste had polluted the
river.
"The agency has to move fast,"
councillor Heri Koswara was quoted as saying by Antara
on Tuesday, "don't wait until one resident becomes a
victim of water pollution."
Councillor Muhammad Hasyim Affandi
from the council´s Commission B that oversees the
environment said that they would ask the agency to
submit a report on the cause of the phenomenon.
"It first happened a few months ago
at every low tide, we could easily pick up thousands of
dying fish in the river," said Muksin, 45, a resident of
Margahayu subdistrict. "I don't know what caused it (the
death), but they are less tasty compared to fresh ones."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Indonesia
Many fish die of asphyxiation
City News - August 09, 2005
Damar Harsanto, The Jakarta Post,
Jakarta
Fish in the waters around Gosong
Sekati, Karya, Panggan and Pramuka islets in the
Thousand Islands regency have died due to asphyxiation,
according to an Environmental Management Agency
statement on Monday.
Kakap (Lates calcarifer), Kerapu
(Epinephalus tauvina), Pari (Elasmobranchii) and
Sembilang (Plotosus sp) fish were among the species
found dead on Friday around the four islets.
"The phenomenon was likely caused by
a drop in oxygen content in the water due to a rapid
proliferation of the phytoplankton population, which
absorbs oxygen in the water," the agency's head Kosasih
Wirahadikusumah told The Jakarta Post.
Kosasih said his agency had taken
samples of the water from the locations and sent them to
the laboratory of the Indonesian Institute of Science's
(LIPI) oceanography for examination.
"Hopefully, the laboratory could come
up with the result this week and we could know exactly
what causes the deaths of the fish," he said.
Head of the Thousand Islands Marine
Park Sumarto said that it had been occurring since
Friday and was the third major case of its kind this
year.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sea ´dead zones´ threaten fish
BBC News Online environment
correspondent in Jeju, Korea
Sea areas starved of oxygen will soon
damage fish stocks even more than unsustainable catches,
the United Nations believes. The UN Environment
Programme says excessive nutrients, mainly nitrogen from
human activities, are causing these "dead zones" by
stimulating huge growths of algae.
Since the 1960s the number of
oxygen-starved areas has doubled every decade, as human
nitrogen production has outstripped natural sources.
Unep made its remarks as it launched its Global
Environment Outlook Year Book 2003.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
By DYLAN DARLING
Thousands of dead fish were found
belly up on the Klamath River southwest of Klamath Falls
this week, the apparent victims of poor water conditions
brought on by hot weather.
Among the dead are some young
endangered sucker fish, but most of the fish are tui
chubs and fathead minnows, and is no reason for alarm,
federal officials said. The fish die-off was reported
Tuesday morning by U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
scientists, who said it occurred Monday evening.
Dead fish were found on a seven-mile
stretch of the Klamath River below Lake Ewauna and in
irrigation diversions on the river. The number of dead
suckers were estimated to be "several thousand" suckers,
said Rae Olsen, Bureau spokeswoman.
"Thousands is the only thing I can
tell you," she said.
The dead suckers were found mostly
near the Lost River Diversion Channel just south of
Klamath Falls, said Roger Smith, fisheries biologist for
the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Afternoon highs have hovered in the
90s since last Thursday.
"And the day before that it was 86,"
Smith said.
The warm air makes for hot water.
Water in the river was measured at 82 degrees at 4 p.m.
Monday.
Suckers can tolerate 75-degree water
for quite some time, but it still harms their health, he
said.
Fish die-offs are common summertime
occurrences that happen because of a combination of low
water and high temperatures. When temperatures go up,
the water quality goes down because oxygen levels are
lowered by decaying algae, Smith said.
Although the warm water and algae
blooms can prove fatal for suckers - especially those
only about a year old - and tui chubs and fathead
minnows, trout usually avoid the danger by swimming to
cool pockets of water and away from the algae.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOWVILLE, N.Y. (AP) - Three million
gallons of liquid manure spilled from a dairy farm and
into a nearby river, creating a smelly flow that was
blamed for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of fish.
The toxic tide had traveled some 20
miles on the Black River by Friday and was expected to
flow past Watertown, a city of 25,000, which shut off
its water intake.
Farmers in this dairy-intensive
county were warned not to let their cows drink from the
river, and emergency officials were trying Friday to
flush out the contamination by increasing the flow from
the Beaver River, which feeds the Black River.
The process could take a week or two,
said Jim Martin, Lewis County's emergency manager.
"If we get some good rain over the
weekend, it's going to help a lot. If it stays hot and
dry, it's going to stay awhile," Martin said.
The manure spilled from a lagoon at
the large Marks Farms late Wednesday or early Thursday
when an earthen wall blew out, sending the liquid into a
drainage ditch and then into the river, Martin said.
State officials estimated the manure
had killed hundreds of thousands of fish, including
perch, bass, catfish, shiners and walleye.
The state health department was
monitoring the manure. No human illnesses had been
reported, Martin said.
No charges had been filed against the
farm owners as of Friday morning, he said.
The farm, about 5 miles south of
Lowville, is owned by David and Jacquelyn Peck and
William Marks, according to federal records. A woman
answering the phone there Friday said the owners were
not speaking to reporters.
Steven Fuller, who owns a riverside
restaurant in Lowville, said his restaurant had many
cancellations Thursday. "The smell is your typical dairy
air, you might say," he said.
Watertown can draw from a 60 million
gallon reserve supply of water through the weekend, if
need be, said Brian Gaffney, the city´s treatment plant
operator.
The spill was expected to reach Lake
Ontario in coming days.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Fourth Fish Kill Investigated in the
Region
8/15/2005
Usually a breeze during a hot summer
day is a welcomed treat. But over the last several days,
The wind has been blowing the scent of dead fish into a
Metairie neighborhood. It’s all the result of a fish
kill in the 17th street canal.
In a canal best known as a border
between Orleans and Jefferson Parishes, silver specks
glisten in the water. But take a closer look, and you´ll
see the sun shining on dead fish.
In Bucktown workers from the
department of environmental quality used a water quality
probe to measure temperature and oxygen levels.
"We had identical conditions in Bayou
Lacombe last week with the fish kill that occurred
there," said John Calvin of the Department of
Environmental Quality.
The cause: nothing toxic, according
to DEQ. Just high heat and low tide, which means low to
no oxygen in the water.
"If there's no oxygen for them, then
they're in trouble. They're starved for oxygen and they
perished," Jeff Dauzat of the Department of
Environmental Quality.
According to DEQ, this is the fourth
fish kill in the region.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Cause of Carmel fish kill probed
By MICHAEL RISINIT
THE JOURNAL NEWS
(Original publication: August 16, 2005)
CARMEL —What killed hundreds of fish
over the weekend in the Croton Falls Reservoir remained
a mystery yesterday.
"Never in my life have I seen
anything like it," said Morgan Seymour Jr., 76, a
lifelong Carmel resident and avid outdoorsman.
Seymour was describing the 1,000 dead
fish — sawbellies, white perch and yellow perch — he saw
at the Croton Falls Reservoir floating in the water or
washed up on the shore. A retired railroad engineer, he
was driving down Stoneleigh Avenue Friday evening when
he noticed a mob of gulls and cormorants diving into the
water near where the road crosses the reservoir.
"I said to myself, ´That's unusual,´
" Seymour said. "So I turned the car around and went
back for a look."
The reservoir is part of New York
City's water supply, which delivers drinking water to 9
million people, including part of Putnam County and most
of Westchester. City and state environmental authorities
yesterday were looking for the cause of the fish kill.
"For now, we just don't know," said
Ian Michaels, a spokesman for the city's Department of
Environmental Protection. "We had people investigating
over the weekend and today."
The DEP oversees the water supply.
Ongoing dam construction has lowered the water level by
about 50 feet, squeezing the Croton Reservoir's fish
into smaller and shallower areas than usual.
Michaels said researchers were
testing for various pollutants and looking to see if the
construction upstream at the Middle Branch Reservoir
released any contaminants into the water. They were also
monitoring the reservoir's content of dissolved oxygen —
what fish need to survive.
"It seems whatever the condition was
has subsided. We're going to keep trying to figure it
out." he said.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
High temperatures, too little oxygen cited as probable
causes for thousands of dead fish found floating in East
Rockaway
BY ERIK GERMAN AND SID CASSESE
STAFF WRITERS
August 18, 2005
Several thousand dead fish were found
floating yesterday in East Rockaway in a local waterway
known as Mill River, a serious die-off state authorities
blamed on high temperatures and low oxygen levels in the
water.
Officials measured the water
temperature at an unusually high 84 to 86 degrees, said
Maureen Wren, a spokeswoman for the state Department of
Environmental Conservation.
Many residents call it the worst fish
kill they've seen in their area. "All the shrimp, the
baby bunkers, carp, white perch, striped bass, all
dead," said resident Steve Christensen, 57, as he stood
on a dock on the Oceanside shore of the river.
Christensen, who added that many
crabs also died, said the fish died beginning Tuesday
night and he saw them surfacing with mouths gaping, as
if gasping for air.
One expert said this may have been
exactly what the fish were doing before they expired.
"They're trying to bubble more oxygen into the water
that passes over their gills," said Gordon Taylor, a
biologist at the Marine Sciences Research Center at
Stony Brook University. Taylor said marine life often
exhibit this behavior when water becomes hypoxic -- when
oxygen levels drop dangerously low as temperatures rise.
The DEC and Hempstead town officials
also blamed .hypoxia.
"More than likely, it´s a lack of
oxygen in the water," said Ron Masters, the Town of
Hempstead's commissioner of conservation and waterways.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dead Fish At Cary Lake Probably A
Result From Heat, Water Official Says
POSTED: 6:46 pm EDT August 17, 2005
CARY, N.C. -- Scorching temperatures
created problems at a Cary lake, leaving many people in
the area wondering what happened, as well as a mess for
crews to clean.
Hundreds of dead shad fish floated to
the surface of Lochmere Lake.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lake Koocanusa fish kill investigated
Posted: Thursday, Aug 18, 2005 - 08:40:10 am PDT
By JIM MANN
The Daily Inter Lake
They don't know how it happened, but
officials with Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks intend
to sleuth their way to answers behind a another fish
kill on Lake Koocanusa.
"We've seen identical types of kills
at least twice before," said Jim Vashro, the
department's regional fisheries manager.
The difference this time was a timely
report and a quick response that allowed the
department's fish health specialist to collect samples
of the dead kokanee salmon before they decomposed.
"Obviously, as the fish decompose,
any evidence is degraded," Vashro said. "It appears the
bulk of the fish died on Sunday and Monday and it was
reported late Monday. Our fish health specialist from
Great Falls was able to find fish that were still dying
on Tuesday, so he got very good samples. The kill
involved "thousands" of kokanee salmon, with some odd
circumstances.
"What's interesting is every dead
fish is an adult kokanee that was getting ready to spawn
in about a month," Vashro said. "No other fish species
are affected and no young kokanee are affected, so
that's kind of peculiar."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration has released its preliminary findings in
this spring's dolphin die-off; 107 dolphins died in 35
days here in the Panhandle.
With every dolphin carcass, another
piece of the puzzle was discovered, but researchers are
still searching for the main picture.
Dr. Teri Rowles with NOAA led the
research response effort along the Panhandle.
"It look like they died shortly after
ingesting a meal. Many of the animals had whole or
partially digested fish in the stomach," he says.
NOAA got involved almost immediately
to study this unusual mortality event. This is the third
dolphin die-off related to red tide in the Gulf of
Mexico, and the second one off the Florida Panhandle.
However, this time the animals showed a higher level of
brevetoxin, which is produced by red tide.
Ron Hardy, the owner of Gulf World,
was the on-site coordinator for the dolphin recovery. He
says every bit of information is useful.
"When you take probably the most
popular living mammal in the ocean, the whales and the
dolphins, to monitor their health and what's going on
with them. I think tells us the health of the ocean
itself."
NOAA dismissed any link between the
die-off and military activity in the Gulf or possible
pollutants as a distinctive factor in the dolphin
deaths. Hardy says nothing is being taken for granted in
this research process, despite taking some time.
"There's a lot of things we've
learned that doesn't involve red tide. When you get that
many animals and you can do the necropsies and do all
the tissue, so we're just learning hundreds and hundreds
of things."
The focus now is why the toxin is
killing the dolphins and at what level is the toxin
potentially fatal, but until all the questions are
answered, the puzzle remains unsolved.