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Ptah

(33,492 posts)
Fri May 20, 2016, 08:29 PM May 2016

FWP to destroy nearly 500k hatchery trout following dam malfunction



Nearly 500,000 trout will be destroyed in a Great Falls-area fish hatchery after a Missouri River dam temporarily lost electricity, causing water to rise and possibly contaminate the facility.

Around 4 a.m. on May 12, the generating unit at Rainbow Dam tripped offline. The temporary loss of power at the dam interrupted NorthWestern Energy’s ability to control and monitor the reservoir’s water elevation. During a period of about 35 minutes, water levels in the reservoir rose about 18 inches.

Staff arriving the next morning at Giant Springs Fish Hatchery, located upstream and adjacent to the dam, discovered the water reached about an inch above boards separating the facility’s outside raceway from the river. The inside raceways and tanks at the hatchery were not “infected” by river water.

The breech means spring-sourced hatchery water may have mixed with untreated river water, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks said in a news release, bringing with it unknown pathogens. FWP uses spring water at all hatcheries to avoid disease.

http://helenair.com/news/natural-resources/updated-fwp-to-destroy-nearly-k-hatchery-trout-following-dam/article_d3730645-92c3-5cdf-b4a8-5a0dc8b046ca.html
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Ford_Prefect

(8,202 posts)
5. The reason for the Hatchery water policy is to stop the transmission of diseases in stocking
Sat May 21, 2016, 09:13 AM
May 2016

other areas. It is done for the health of the fish stocked in a variety of locations other locations. In an era when so many rivers and lakes are affected by run-off from human activity it is very difficult to maintain healthy fish in some locations and avoid spreading parasites and fish diseases.

The Missouri River is known to harbor whirling disease, a potentially lethal parasite to young trout. Although whirling disease is a concern, other unknown pathogens that could be in the river water also made salvaging the trout problematic, the news release says.

In response, FWP has decided to destroy the majority of the potentially infected 450,000 rainbow and 50,000 brook trout. The department estimates the trout are worth about $300,000.

About 20,000 will be put into the river immediately adjacent to the hatchery and 500 will go into the children’s fishing pond near the hatchery, according to FWP.

“This is an extremely tough decision, but we felt the only course of action was to destroy the fish in the outside raceways,” Eileen Ryce, FWP hatchery bureau chief and acting fisheries division administrator, said in a statement. “We take the health of our fisheries very seriously and our tolerance for risk to the public’s resource is very low.”


Likely they will turn the contaminated trout into fertilizer.
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