JUNIPER PUBLISHERS-Oceanography & Fisheries Open Access Journal
A Comparison of Fish Kills in the Pamlico River and the Neuse River in Coastal North Carolina (A Symptom) and Abiotic Factors (The Root Causes)
Authored by Leonard J Pietrafesa*
For many decades the State of North
Carolina (NC) witnessed fish kills in its coastal waters, particularly its
inshore coastal estuarine and riverine waters. This study looks at fish kill
data collected from two adjacent coastal rivers, the Neuse River and the
Pamlico River, which both experienced fish kills over an 11 year period, and
looks at possible naturally occurring abiotic environmental factors which may
have contributed to or been responsible for the documented numbers of fish kill
events and the sizes of those individual and collective events. In our study,
naturally occurring abiotic environmental factors, including excessive
precipitation or the lack thereof, and seasonal atmospheric wind fields, and
subsequent estuarine circulations, were found to be responsible for creating
strongly vertically salt stratified conditions in both river- estuaries,
lowering dissolved oxygen levels in the bottom layers in the two separate
rivers. We also present the possibility that excessive nutrient loading of both
rivers may be responsible for lowering oxygen levels. These factors may have
resulted in the fish kills.
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