Observer-Reporter, September 16, 2009
Agencies investigate large fish kill
By Bob Niedbala, Staff writer, _niedbala(a)observer-reporter.com_
(mailto:niedbala@observer-reporter.com)
State and federal environmental agencies continue to investigate a large
fish kill on Dunkard Creek and may be coming closer to determining its
cause.
The kill was first reported Sept. 1 near Pentress, W.Va. It has since moved
downstream past Mt. Morris and, according to some sources, stretches as
far as Pigeon Hole Road in Dunkard Township.
The kill was believed to have subsided last week, but additional fresh fish
kills were discovered during the past weekend, said Helen Humphreys,
spokeswoman for the state Department of Environmental Protection.
"Either this is ongoing or it's a second slug of pollutants moving
downstream," she said.
The incident has killed hundreds of fish including bass, muskies, white
suckers, catfish and red horse fish, as well as other forms of aquatic life
such as mussels and mud puppies, she said.
Humphreys said at one site near Brave more than 300 dead fish were found
representing 18 species.
Pennsylvania and West Virginia environmental protection agencies as well as
the federal Environmental Protection Agency continue to investigate the
kill.
"Right now," Humphreys said, "I don't think anybody has conclusively
identified the source."
One of the possible pollutants the agencies are now considering is total
dissolved solids, Humphreys said. Very high levels of total dissolved solids
have been found in the water, particularly in the West Virginia portion of
the stream.
The solids included high levels of chlorides, which is indicator of mine
discharges, Humphreys said. Investigators are looking at discharges from
three active mining operations in the watershed, she said.
A preliminary report prepared by the EPA indicated a likely source may be
Consol Energy's Blacksvlle No. 2 Mine because of high levels of chloride in
its waste water.
EPA spokesman David Sternberg said, however, investigators have not
determined that the mine is the source of the pollution. "We suspect Blacksville
No. 2 may have been a source but we can't rule out other sources right now,"
he said.
Consol Energy spokesman Joe Cerenzia said the company is aware of the fish
kill and is working with state and federal agencies investigating it, but
to the company's knowledge, the agencies have not conclusively pinpointed
the cause.
Kathy Cosco, spokeswoman for the West Virginia Department of Environmental
Protection, said her agency has had people out at the creek everyday and
continues to collect information from water samples and monitoring stations.
The agency still needs a little more data before it attempts to draw any
conclusions about the cause and the source, she said. "We're not ready to
point any fingers yet," she said.
Tom Burrie, 31, of Carmichaels, who has fished in the creek since his
youth, said he checked the stream Tuesday and estimated thousands of fish have
died.
Burrie said he could see fish attempting to swim into tributaries to the
creek trying to get to fresh water. Some of the dead muskies he saw, Burrie
said, were more than 42 inches long.
"Everything in the water is dead, clams, mud puppies everything," he said.
"It will take years for that creek to recover."
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