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Fish kill in American Falls numbers in the hundreds

Along the banks of the Snake River reservoirs, anglers are out making catches. But floating downstream are hundreds of dead fish, the result of a recent oxygen drop in the river.

“This time of year, the bottom part of the reservoir gets really low in oxygen and that started to impact the water that was coming into the dam and moving downstream, late last Thursday, early Friday morning,” David Tuescher of Idaho Fish & Game explained. “Oxygen levels in the water coming into the dam dropped from five milligrams per liter down to zero.”

Drops like this are naturally occurring and while this one resulted in the deaths of hundreds of fish, Tuescher says it could have been much worse.

“I would consider us fairly fortunate here,” Tuescher said. “We’ve seen hundreds of trout, and other species…have all died during this event, we could have had a much worse fishkill. It could have been, thousands of trout, and we could have lost a lot larger percentage of our sturgeon population.”

With a large population of the fish surviving, many people are still throwing their lines in the water, and for those who had been fishing in the days before and after the fish kill, there is no need to worry.

“That’s right, there’s no human safety issue here. The fish that were caught before the fish kill or immediately after the fish kill, there’s no danger to someone if they want to eat the fish,” Teuscher said.

But all of the thanks, Tuescher said, belongs to the anglers who reported the deaths.

“I want to thank the anglers who reported the fish kill, it’s not very often that you can mitigate for these sort of things when they are occurring, but the sooner we know about them, the sooner we can get there to help prevent it or stop it.

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ORIGINAL: Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG), Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and Idaho Power representatives say the cause of a recent fish kill in the Snake River immediately below the American Falls Dam was a lack of sufficient oxygen in the water.

On Saturday, an IDFG officer responded to calls about dead sturgeon and other fish floating in the Snake River near Vista boat ramp.

Based on observations by DEQ and IDFG, it appears hundreds of fish, including rainbow trout, smallmouth bass and yellow perch, died. IDFG also recovered eight dead white sturgeon.

So what happened?

The powerhouse at the dam receives water from the bottom of the American Falls Reservoir. As the water enters the penstocks, it is measured for temperature and dissolved oxygen. On August 2, during a few short hours, oxygen levels entering the dam dropped from over 5 mg/l to 0 mg/l. Trout need about 3.5 mg/l at a minimum for survival. The rapid decline in oxygen occurred between 10 p.m. and midnight. Low oxygen levels are normal for this time of year, but abrupt changes like that experienced on August 2 are not common.

Oxygen levels have since returned to normal, and reports from anglers on August 6 have been good for both trout and sturgeon.

Aren’t there safety mechanisms in place to protect fish?

There are, and they worked as they were supposed to. Idaho Power’s operations complied with requirements of its license to operate the hydroelectric power plant at American Falls and with State of Idaho water quality standards. Rapid implementation of procedures designed to maintain oxygen levels are the reason why the levels were restored so quickly and why only hundreds of fish died instead of thousands. Here’s how that works.

Below American Falls Dam there is a water monitoring site that uses equipment to measure water characteristics like temperature and dissolved oxygen levels. This monitoring site is located about 150 yards downstream of the dam where the spill way meets the tailrace and records data every 10 minutes.

When dissolved oxygen drops below a certain threshold, a blower in the dam kicks on to increase oxygen into the water going through the dam. Then 10 minutes later, the dissolved oxygen levels are measured again at the monitoring site. If the oxygen levels are not at the approved threshold, then the second blower kicks on. If the two blowers fail to bring up the oxygen levels, an alarm sounds which warns operators at the dam to release water down the spillway. The extra turbulent water churns down the spillway, bringing with it additional dissolved oxygen.

During the early morning hours on Friday, August 3, both blowers and the spillway were fully engaged, sending dissolved oxygen to the area of the Snake River below the dam. However, dead and dying fish were already floating in the water, even floating downstream– later prompting the weekend phone calls from the public to IDFG and the Power County Sheriff’s office.

The water itself and any fish caught in that section of river over the weekend present no health risks to humans as a result of the low oxygen levels.

IDFG personnel spent most of the day on Monday below American Falls Da, further investigating the issue, collecting some of the dead fish, measuring water temperatures and oxygen levels, talking with anglers and checking fishing creels.

Officials say it appears many fish survived.

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