Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
May 6, 2009
3. Watersheds –
Study: Just 15% of Lakes Clean
By
A new study sampling fish from a fraction of
Just 15 percent of the lakes sampled were considered "clean" - that is, the average amount of contamination in fish caught from those lakes was below all human health thresholds, the State Water Resources Control Board reported.
The California Sportfishing Protection Alliance called this a "damning assessment of the state of
State officials, however, said more sampling is needed. "There is no reason to stop eating all fish from all lakes in
Jay Davis, senior scientist with the Oakland-based San Francisco Estuary Institute, which is conducting the ongoing study for the state, said the analysis is the largest of its kind to date.
"The take-home message is that contamination is widespread in
The biggest culprit is mercury, a poisonous metal that lingers from the Gold Rush era in streams draining from the
That contamination spreads up the food chain to humans, attacking the nervous system. Seventy-four percent of the lakes in the study contained fish with mercury concentrations above one threshold for public consumption.
PCBs, chemicals used by electric utilities and industry, are also a problem. Pesticides at high levels were a less frequent occurrence.
Not surprisingly, fish from upper-elevation lakes were less likely to be contaminated, although even some of those water bodies - famously clear Lake Tahoe,
The closest to home for
The study targeted popular lakes for fishing and randomly sampled a few others as well. In all, 6,000 fish from 152 lakes and reservoirs were checked; a second wave of tests was conducted, but those results have not been released.
Mother Lode fisherman and author William Heinselman said he believes the risk from eating fish is relatively low. "You should not be scared of the lakes," he said. "If you're going to consume 4 pounds of fish a day, yeah, you may damage something. But not if you're only eating one meal a week."#
http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090506/A_NEWS/905060328/-1/rss14
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