At-risk fish
Fish species that are at risk, the activists say, include American shad, striped bass and the critically endangered Delaware River population of Atlantic sturgeon, of which only a few hundred are thought to remain.
“While dissolved oxygen can remain relatively abundant in some years, such as the summer of 2014, the estuary’s overall fate, and the fate of such species as the critically endangered Atlantic sturgeon, are left to chance,” the environmental groups wrote in a letter to the DRBC on Sept. 9. They said that the higher temperatures resulting from climate change may have played a role in the oxygen depletion.
The regulator, which manages water flows for the four basin states — New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Delaware — has been studying whether water quality can be improved to support fish breeding since at least 2017, and last year extended the study period until September 2022 because of delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
In 2018, the DRBC commissioned the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University to study the dissolved oxygen levels needed by the river’s fish species. The study concluded that dissolved oxygen levels of 6 to 8 milligrams per liter “would be optimal” for the survival and success of key species in the estuary.
In their letter, the environmental groups acknowledged there has been a significant improvement in the river’s water quality since the 1960s but said the DRBC’s existing standard was never intended to protect the spawning of resident and migratory fish that now occurs every year in a tidal stretch of the river between the Tacony-Palmyra Bridge and Wilmington, Delaware.
Although there has been a recovery in fish numbers and variety since severe pollution in the 20th century created a “dead zone” in the river’s oxygen levels near Camden, the portion of oxygen depletion that’s caused by nitrogen discharges has not improved, and represents a major piece of unfinished business in the long-term cleanup of the river, said Maya van Rossum, who heads the Delaware Riverkeeper Network.
“Just because populations have been allowed to rebound to a certain extent, that does not negate the important damage being inflicted by a lack of oxygen, and that is very much a limiting factor in the population being able to fully restore,” she said.