30 Years of Investigating Fish and Wildlife Kills and Pollution in Texas

Table of Contents:

Reporting a Kill or Spill:

Call our 24-Hour Communication Center (512) 389-4848 - Austin

 

Kills and Spills Team (KAST)

Thirty Years of Investigating Fish and Wildlife Kills and Pollution in Texas

By Cindy Contreras
Resource Protection Division
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
June 2003

Abstract

From 1958 to 1997 Texas Parks and Wildlife investigated over 4500 incidents of pollution or kills involving fish and wildlife. The leading cause of kills was low dissolved oxygen. Two-thirds of the losses were caused by human activities. The greatest single cause of kills resulted from stagnant water in industrial or residential dead-end canals. Other significant human-induced factors leading to low dissolved oxygen kills are the release of pollutants into the water and the reduction or stoppage of flow in a stream. Natural causes of low dissolved oxygen include storms and drought. After dissolved oxygen, the most common causes of fish and wildlife mortality included cold fronts or freezes and harmful algal blooms.

Introduction


Alternative Format :

For a printable version of this information with accompanying charts and graphs, you may download the document media download(PDF 295.1 KB).