Post Fish-Kill Monitoring on the Ogeechee River

Thomas Kuhn, Stephen P. Vives

Research output: Contribution to conferencePresentation

Abstract

In May of 2011, the Ogeechee River was the site of the largest fish kill in Georgia’s history. In the wake of this event Georgia Southern University initiated a three-year monitoring project in June 2014 to better understand the ecology of the Ogeechee River in the coastal plain. The Ogeechee River basin is a blackwater system characterized by low gradient, low conductivity, high dissolved organic carbon, extensive floodplains, variable discharge, and predominantly sandy substrate. These factors result in a set of distinct challenges to a fixed monitoring protocol that will be discussed. Monitoring ranges from assessments of potential stressors of the river to fish abundance and diversity measures. Fishes are being monitored quarterly at six sites, three above a textile processing plant discharging treated waste into the river and three below the textile plant. Fishes are sampled at each site in single-pass electrofishing transects. We will report fish assemblage metrics (richness, diversity, IBI) from the first quarterly samples.
Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - Jan 29 2015
EventSouthern Division of the American Fisheries Society -
Duration: Jan 29 2015 → …

Conference

ConferenceSouthern Division of the American Fisheries Society
Period01/29/15 → …

Keywords

  • Biology
  • Fish-kill monitoring
  • Ogeechee River

DC Disciplines

  • Biology

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