ENVIRONMENT AGENCY SOLVES FISH DEATH MYSTERY

Environmental Panorama
London – UK
June of 2005

 

29/06/2005 - The Environment Agency has discovered why hundreds of fish died in Foxcotte Lake in Andover last month. New research into toxins that can cause damage to fish has provided a vital clue to the incident.
The Environment Agency was called to the lake in early June after receiving reports of dead fish from the Andover Angling Club. Extensive investigations were carried out and the Environment Agency considered various possible causes of death including the occurrence of a pollution incident or an outbreak of disease.

Water quality samples and autopsies of the fish were carried out but all investigations failed to identify the cause of death and Environment Agency Fisheries Officers were baffled. However, new research undertaken by the Environment Agency and Royal Holloway College has now given Officers valuable information that has helped identify the most likely cause of death.

Andy Thomas, Environment Agency Fisheries Technical Specialist in Hampshire, said: "An incident like this involving a wide variety of species is usually due to problems with water quality and not an outbreak of disease so our initial investigations focussed on that possibility. But then we heard about this new research being carried out by our colleagues and it has shed some light on the incident."

To undertake this research, scientists have been looking at fish gill tissue under powerful scanning electron microscopes. They have been able to identify damage that has been caused to fish by exposure to bacterial exotoxins, which are naturally produced toxins. The production of bacterial exotoxins is thought to be linked to changes in the nutrient status of the water.

Andy Thomas continued: "We carried out extensive investigations into this incident but it remained a mystery. Now we have looked into this research everything suggests that these toxins are the reason that hundreds of fish died in Foxcotte Lake."

The Environment Agency, Test Valley Borough Council and Andover Angling Club have now met to discuss the findings and what can be done to minimise the risks of future fish deaths. Members of the public are advised that the toxins responsible for the fish deaths are harmless to other wildlife and humans.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
Press consultantship
(Lucy Harding)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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