Fish carcasses from a major fish kill in Louisiana's Plaquemines Parish are shown here. (Courtesy Kurt Fromherz/Plaquemines Parish )
Plaquemines Parish officials said a request for extensive testing has been made to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association and the Environmental Protection Agency. (Courtesy Kurt Fromherz/Plaquemines Parish )
Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser asked the Louisiana Department of Wildlife & Fisheries to investigate the fish kill. "We can't continue to see these fish kills," he said. "We need some additional tests to find out why these fish are dying in large numbers. If it is low oxygen, we need to identify the cause." (Courtesy Kurt Fromherz/Plaquemines Parish )
Some of the dead fish found floating in the Bayou Chaland area were pogies, redfish, shrimp, crabs and freshwater eels. (Courtesy Kurt Fromherz/Plaquemines Parish )
Since the BP oil spill, Louisiana's Bayou Chaland area has been heavily affected but the cause of the fish kill has yet to be determined. (P. J. Hahn/Plaquemines Parish Coastal Zone Management/Reuters)
Officials with Louisiana's Plaquemines Parish are investigating why hundreds of thousands of dead fish were found in the Bayou Chaland area of the state, which is west of the Mississippi River. Workers with the Plaquemines Parish Inland Waterways Strike Force discovered the massive fish kill Sept. 10, 2010, and reported it to the Louisiana Department of Wildlife & Fisheries. (P. J. Hahn/Plaquemines Parish Coastal Zone Management/Reuters)
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