Wildlife Damage Management, Internet Center for
Title
Pollution-Caused Fish Kills In 1962
Document Type
Article
Date of this Version
December 1962
Abstract
This publication is the third annual report of
fish kills caused by pollution occurring in the
United States. The reporting of pollution-caused
fish kills was begun by the Public Health Service
in the Spring of 1960 in an effort to secure additional
information on the effects of pollution in the
Nation's waters, to elicit the cooperation and
assistance of conservation groups in the States to
help determine causes of fish kills and assist in
their abatement, and to place responsibility for
fish kills where it belonged.
The Surgeon General asked all State conservation
and fish and game agencies to assist him by
reporting instances of fish kills attributable to
pollutants entering the streams or lakes of the
Nation. A self-addressed postcard reporting form
was devised in cooperation with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service and the various independent conservation
organizations. The form, shown in this
publication as figure 1, was furnished to the State
agencies to be completed as occasions arose and
mailed to the Public Health Service. Summary
totals and statistical evaluations and conclusions
are based upon the information contained in these
reporting forms.
The fish kill activity has just completed its third
year of operation. As it matures and as the
reporting authorities in the States become accustomed
to furnishing more complete information
about each kill, the resulting publications will
undoubtedly become more meaningful, and serve
as a more useful tool in helping to identify and
abate pollution.
In 1962, a semi-annual report was published
listing reported fish kills for the period January-June,
1962. This present report includes all fish
kills in 1962 which were reported by the various
State agencies. Even though the resulting totals
of fish killed are large, they probably represent
only a fraction of fish actually killed throughout
the United States by man-made pollution.
In an effort to make the reporting of these fish
kills more accurate and hence the published summaries
more useful and effective, it was found
desirable to revise portions of the postcard reporting
form. Beginning in January 1963, the revised
form was put into use throughout the States and
future summaries will indicate more accurately
the source of pollution believed to have killed the
fish. Most pollution-caused fish kills are attributable
to operational activities. The revised reporting
form on which next year's publication will be
based indicates four principal operations causing
the majority of fish kills: agricultural, industrial,
municipal, and transportation operations, with
appropriate subheadings. When classified in this
manner, the responsibility for causing fish kills
can be more accurately defined.
As the reporting forms are received from the
States, copies are furnished to the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. Reports were excluded from the
listing if it was apparent that the kill was not
related to pollution. Lack of sufficient dissolved
oxygen in the water from natural biological
activity will kill fish, but is not necessarily related
to man-made pollution. Some reports indicated
kills had occurred too far in the past to determine
the cause or extent. Other reports stated that
pollution occurred but no fish were killed, and
some referred to shellfish which died of causes not
related to pollution. Of the total reports received,
however, only a small number are excluded from
the summary.
Acceptable reports are coded for machine punch
card tabulation so that various statistical tables
can be obtained. The punch card method permits
the insertion of late reports in the sequence in
which they occurred.

Comments
Published by U. S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE, Public Health Service.