1,000 fish killed in Vancouver creek contamination - Action News
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British Columbia

1,000 fish killed in Vancouver creek contamination

More than 1,000 fish have been killed following a chlorine contamination incident in one of the last salmon-bearing streams in Vancouver.

Fish killed in B.C.

12 years ago
Duration 2:05
More than a thousand fish were killed after chlorinated water was pumped into a creek

More than 1,000 fish have been killed following a chlorine contamination incident in one of the last salmon-bearing streams in Vancouver.

CBC News learned Friday that the kill occurred in late September when a residential swimming pool a south Vancouver was drained into a storm sewer, literally bleaching salmon, trout, and other marine life in a stream that flows through the Musqueam Indian Reserve.

Aboriginal fisheries officer Willard Sparrow said he and a partner stumbled onto the "kill zone" after spotting a clear liquid being discharged into Musqueam Creek.

"There was clear liquid coming out of here, that smelled of a heavy chlorine smell and upon our approach we saw some fish that were belly up," Sparrow said.

Sparrow said a contractor doing work on the swimming pool didnt realize the storm sewer went directly into the creek.

"What we found really bizarre is that the fish were bleached," he said.

Sparrow said the incident is especially regrettable because the Musqueam and many volunteers have spent years restoring the creek.

"It kind offelt like somebody burnt my church down. That's how important this system is to me. It's culturally important. It's culturally whoI am," said Sparrow..

Three spawning coho salmon were also killed.

Sparrow is worried that if there isnt rain soon to flush out the creek out, other coho and chum salmon waiting to come upstream will meet the same fate.

The Musqueam are nowpassing out flyers to residents to try to stopany further pollution.

With files from the CBC's Emily Elias and Terry Donnelly