EARTHWORKS

Home » EARTHblog » Fish deformities linked to selenium from mining operation on Wyoming, Idaho border

Fish deformities linked to selenium from mining operation on Wyoming, Idaho border

Bonnie Gestring's avatar
By Bonnie Gestring

February 9, 2012

A research team hired by the J.R. Simplot Co. has linked selenium discharged from the company's phosphate mine near the Wyoming border to high rates of deformities in trout, including cases of brown trout fry with two heads, missing fins and cranial deformities. 

Yes, you read that right. 

And, still these phosphate mines are not required to report their releases to the EPA's Toxic Release Inventory - a publicly available database so communities can have information on the amount of pollution released in and near their homes.

And, what's worse, the company is asking for an exemption from water quality standards for two selenium polluted streams near Simplots Smoky Canyon Mine in Idaho.

The "phosphate patch" in this region is notorious for the number of livestock deaths associated with selenium pollution.

For more information, read this great piece.  And, to read our comments to the EPA to require phosphate mines to report its toxic discharges to the TRI, read here.

Tagged with: toxicity, simplot, selenium, phosphate mining, idaho, epa

Share:

On Twitter

May 16 | 4:38 pm
@MarkeyMemo 12.5% ,the same royalty paid by coal and oil, should apply to hardrock #mining and HR 4402 http://t.co/ljaAtLuM
May 16 | 4:36 pm
@MarkeyMemo HR 4402 The states need revenue for #mining activities. Add a royalty. Pick and shovel tech is long gone. http://t.co/9gkcfrz0

On Facebook