Inland Fisheries Ireland has issued an appeal to farmers in Cork to remain vigilant during the summer months when harvesting silage and spreading slurry to avoid water pollution and the loss of nutrients to water.
INLAND Fisheries Ireland has issued an appeal to farmers in Cork to remain vigilant during the summer months when harvesting silage and spreading slurry to avoid water pollution and the loss of nutrients to water.Â
There were 31 separate fish kills across the country last year, with eight of those directly attributable to agricultural activities.
Three of the eight fish kills caused by agricultural practices in 2016 occurred in Cork, with one each in Meath, Kilkenny, Kerry, Sligo and Galway.
Fish killed in these incidents included brown trout, atlantic salmon, eel, stone loach and stickleback.Â
In addition to the agricultural related kills, two fish kills were as a result of municipal works and one by industrial works.Â
In four instances, the exact cause of the fish kill was difficult to ascertain while 16 incidents of fish kills were as a result of disease and natural causes.
 As agriculture was the largest identifiable and avoidable attributing factor to fish kills last year, farmers are reminded of the importance of managing their silage operations correctly.Â
Silage operations are ongoing all summer and silage effluent has the potential to cause devastating pollution in streams and rivers. Silage effluent is a significant polluting substance, starving fish and invertebrate life of oxygen, resulting in potentially massive fish kills if it enters a watercourse. With some rivers low during summertime with little dilution capacity, the effect of a small leak can cause huge damage.
 Inland Fisheries Ireland is advising farmers in Cork to follow its simple six point plan to ensure good farmyard management and reduce their risk of polluting: Use round bales as the most environmentally friendly way to store silage; if a silage pit is being used, ensure it is properly sealed to prevent leakage from under the slab; carry out slurry spreading in dry weather and never when heavy rain is forecast; never spread slurry close to a watercourse, be aware of the slope of land to the watercourse; do not clean tanks beside any watercourse, stream or a river, and do not allow any effluent or washings to enter any rainwater gully.
Dr Greg Forde, head of operations at Inland Fisheries Ireland said: âInland Fisheries Ireland is grateful to the farming community for their continued consideration and vigilance.Â
âGood farmyard management can help to prevent accidental runs of polluting substances and protect the local environment. This will have a significant and lasting positive impact on valuable wild fish populations in an area.
Inland Fisheries Ireland manages a wide range of environmental issues which can affect the fisheries resource with over 22,000 environmental inspections carried out in 2016 across industrial, forestry, engineering, water treatment and wind farms sites. There were 1,553 inspections across farmyards to help identify any risks and prevent damage to the local aquatic habitat.
Inland Fisheries Ireland has a confidential hotline number to enable members of the general public to report incidents of water pollution, fish kills and illegal fishing â 1890 34 74 24 or 1890 FISH 24. For more information on Inland Fisheries Ireland, visit www.fisheriesireland.ie.