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Massive Die-Off Leaves Dozens of Tons of Dead, Rotting Fish Washing Ashore In Mexico Lake
Massive Die-Off Leaves Dozens of Tons of Dead, Rotting Fish Washing Ashore In Mexico Lake
Nov 25, 2024 4:05 PM

Dozens of Tons of Dead Fish Wash Ashore in Mexico

Fishermen collect dead 'popocha' fish at the lagoon of Cajititlan in Tlajomulco de Zuniga, Jalisco State, Mexico, on Sept. 1, 2014.

Hundreds of thousands of dead fish washed ashore at a lake in western Mexico last weekend, and local authorities believe the massive die-off may have been caused by low water levels or pollution from a nearby wastewater treatment plant.

More than 50 tons of rotting fish were removed from Lake Cajititlan in western Jalisco state, the state environment department said late Sunday. Workers used shovels, a bulldozer, boats and wheel barrels removed the dead fish, whose stench was so strong that workers needed masks to ward off the smell.

The small, finger-sized fish are a type of chub known locally as "popocha." Samples of the dead fish have been sent to laboratories for testing, and the state environment department said late Sunday it was not due to natural causes.

But Manuel Guzman Arroyo, director of the University of Guadalajara's Fresh Water Institute, said the lake is very shallow, and that a strong wind or other causes could have stirred up sediment and deprived the fish of oxygen.

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"The lake has problems because too much water is being drawn off, and its level is very low," said Guzman Arroyo. The lake is surrounded by up-scale housing developments and its waters are used for irrigation and recreation, but he said pollution probably wasn't a big problem.

It was the fourth time this year there has been a die-off at the lake, which sits between Guadalajara and Lake Chapala.

Also Monday, authorities acknowledged that birds, turtles and fish had died off from a fuel spill at a river in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz.

The spill, which happened Aug. 27 and spread for almost a mile was caused by thieves drilling an illegal tap into a gasoline pipeline.

While workers contracted by the state-owned Pemex oil company had managed to contain the spill with booms, heavy rains had caused those containment ponds to overflow and spread the fuel again.

Dalos Rodriguez Vargas, the Veracruz state environmental prosecutor, said dozens of "reptiles, birds and fish" had been killed, but that the bigger concern was that even heavier rains could spread the pollution to a nearby lake.

"The danger is that if it rains more, with the tropical weather system out there, it could overflow again if they don't get it gathered up quickly, and reach the lake," Rodriguez Vargas said.

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"They are working with all possible speed to get it contained," he said. The lake is known as the Laguna Maria Lizamaba, and is a local tourist attraction. Rodriguez Vargas said the oil company would also have to reforest the river banks where vegetation has been affected.

Thousands of illegal pipeline taps have become an increasing environmental and safety problem in Mexico, because they frequently trigger spills or explosions.

An oil spill last week in the northern state of Nuevo Leon that was also caused by an illegal tap may takes weeks to clean up, the state-run oil company said Monday.

It said some oil on the river banks was still being washed off with pressure hoses, and that cleaning up oil-soaked vegetation "will continue in the coming weeks."

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Iranian Turkman fishermen use a net to pull a Beluga Sturgeon, valued throughout the world for its superior quality caviar, onto their boat in the Caspian Sea. (Image: HENGHAMEH FAHIMI/AFP/Getty Images)

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