01/05/2005
TPWD News Release
GOLDEN ALGA BLOOMS CAUSING PROBLEMS ON LAKE GRANBURY
Media Contact: Steve Lightfoot (512) 389-4701 or steve.lightfoot@tpwd.state.tx.us
AUSTIN, Texas – A couple of isolated and relatively minor active fish kills
on Lake Granbury have been traced to elevated levels of golden alga toxins,
according to Texas Parks and Wildlife Department officials. “We
could be seeing the beginning stages of an outbreak or it could be some isolated
incidents that just go away, there’s no way to tell at this time,” said Joan
Glass, an investigator with TPWD’s Kills and Spills Team. “The good news
is because of all the recent rains the creeks are all running and there are
places for fish to hide and get away from the toxins.” TPWD and
Brazos River Authority staff are continuing to monitor the 8,700-acre impoundment
located 30 miles southwest of Fort Worth. According to Glass, water samples
pulled from the Ports O’ Call homeowner canal near the dam and from the Bentwater
Shores canal near Highway 377 revealed elevated golden alga cell counts.
Most of the fish kill has occurred in shallow water near those areas.
At present, Granbury is the only lake in Texas experiencing an active
fish kill related to golden alga. “Things are looking good at Possum Kingdom
and Lake Texoma and Lake Whitney is also in pretty good shape,” Glass noted.
“We’re hoping this event follows the same course as the one we saw on Whitney
last November where it just went away.” First discovered in Texas in 1985,
golden alga (Prymnesium parvum) was identified in a fish kill in the Pecos
River and has since been responsible for fish kills in the Colorado, Canadian,
Wichita, Red and Brazos river systems as well. This alga releases a toxin
that kills gill-breathing organisms such as fish and clams. According to
the Texas Department of State Health Services, anecdotal evidence has shown
no human health risks associated with golden alga. Since 2001, golden alga
fish kills have occurred on two dozen reservoirs in Texas. Since 1985, nearly
18 million fish have been killed. Although significant numbers of game fish
were affected in several areas, most of the fish killed were either forage
or rough fish species. …
On the Net: www.tpwd.state.tx.us/hab/ga