Yahoo – AFP,
Claire de Oliveira Neto, 8 Nov 2014
Rio de
Janeiro (AFP) - Thousands of dead fish have begun mysteriously washing up in
the polluted Rio bay that will host sailing events at the 2016 Olympics -- and
experts are at a loss to explain why.
Guanabara
Bay has already been the subject of concern amongst sailors who are to compete
in Rio because of the human sewage that gets pumped into its waters.
The
International Olympic Committee (IOC) has expressed confidence that Guanabara
will be fit for purpose by the time of the games.
![]() |
A fisherman
weighs fish in Paqueta Island,
located at Guanabara bay in Rio de
Janeiro,
Brazil, on November 5, 2014
(AFP Photo/Yasuyoshi Chiba)
|
Scientists
are baffled by the phenomenon but say there is no evidence so far to suggest
pollution is the cause.
The foul
odor first took over the usually peaceful Paqueta Island, where cars are banned
and the population of 4,500 people travels on horseback or bicycle among the
only baobab trees in Brazil.
With the
help of a bulldozer, a municipal company has removed 20 tonnes of dead sabalo
fish -- from the Clupeidae family of herrings and sardines -- as well as four
dead sea turtles.
"Tests
showed that this is not a matter of chemical or toxic water pollution,"
Rio do Janeiro State University oceanographer David Zee told AFP.
Leandro
Daemon of the National Institute for the Environment, or INEA, agreed that
water testing had not identified any toxic chemicals or any unusual change in
the water's pH (potential of hydrogen), salinity or oxygen.
"We
have no answer yet about what happened, but we can certainly exclude the hypothesis
of a chemical pollution killing the fish," he said.
'Don't go
in'
But not
everyone is so sure.
Worried
fishermen and islanders are pointing the finger at the petrochemical activities
of state giant Petrobras.
"We
want to know why so many fish have died. The rotten smell is horrible and there
are many flies on the island. The authorities tell us nothing," said Vilma
Leocadio of the Paqueta citizens' association.
"We
are afraid, we do not bathe in the sea any more and do not buy fish here."
Rosimere
Figueiredo, 52, said Paqueta was in distress.
"I do
not encourage you to step in the water with all those dead bodies of fish. We
see them dying," she said.
Five of the
fish were sent Tuesday to the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro's biology
department for analysis, and the results will be announced in a week.
Experts
want to know if there are any signs of pollution or disease in the entrails or
gills.
High
temperatures to blame?
One
hypothesis is that the culprit is predatory fishing.
At this
time of year, fishing is prohibited, but it is common for fishermen to still
work, catching fish like sabalo that have a lower market value, Zee said.
But the
expert said the likeliest scenario was that the deaths are caused by
"thermal pollution" of the water.
![]() |
Worried
fishermen and islanders are
pointing the finger at the petrochemical
activities
of state giant Petrobras (AFP
Photo/Yasuyoshi Chiba)
|
He noted
that Paqueta is located at the bottom of the Rio bay, where water circulation
and exchange is more difficult, a phenomenon exacerbated by the low tide.
"What
is striking is the duration of this mortality and also the high temperature of
the water," said biologist Mario Moscatelli, who has studied the bay's
waters for 20 years.
"I
flew over the area in early October, and fish were floating. At first, we
thought they were thrown into the sea by fishermen. But before too long, I saw
them dying in a way that seemed they were missing oxygen."
He said the
sabalo, being more sensitive, are the first fish to die in the Rodrigo de
Freitas Lagoon, which contains sea water carried through a canal in Rio's
southern zone.
"But
in case of chemical contamination, other species will die," he said.
"We have more questions than answers. We must wait for the results of the
analysis."



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