In This Section
Headline News
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Lawsuit alleges dam is illegally killing protected coho salmon
05.21.2012
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State Senate OKs bill to limit power of Southland water district
05.21.2012
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Regional water authority wants official role in desal project review
05.21.2012
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Great Russian River Race a hit with kayakers, canoeists
05.17.2012
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New Online Application and Other Tools Expand Public Access to Critical Data for Assessing Water Availability Across the West
05.17.2012
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Bacteria
While certain levels of bacteria help maintain balance in healthy aquatic ecosystems, high concentrations of some bacteria raise significant public health and environmental concerns. Dangerous bacteria can enter our waters from various sources, such as dairy farms and sewage treatment plants. Bacteria such as fecal coliform and E. coli raise the risk of waterborne diseases ranging in severity from ear infections and gastroenteritis, to typhoid and hepatitis A. Excessive bacteria levels also starve fish of the oxygen they require.
Selected pollutant maps: Nutrient Pollution | Bacteria Pollution | Mercury Pollution | Sediment Pollution | Back to all impaired waterbodies



