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Beyond the Overflows

Pollution Hurts Delicate Life Cycles of Fish

Posted on June 1, 2025

By Desirae Sin
UConn Journalism

Freshwater rivers are vital to the life­cy­cle of many fish species, but pol­lu­tion and over­flows of sewage and waste­water can hurt these del­i­cate process­es.

Sewer over­flows enter­ing the Connecticut River and its trib­u­taries can lead to die-offs of sev­er­al valu­able migra­to­ry fish species, includ­ing the American shad, Connecticut’s offi­cial fish, and sev­er­al other species.

Shad spend much of their lives in the ocean, return­ing to rivers to spawn. Once hatch­lings in the Connecticut River and its trib­u­taries mature, they make their way to the Atlantic Ocean. The next sea­son, they return to the rivers.

The Connecticut River Conservancy (CRC), a non-prof­it that mon­i­tors the full length of the Connecticut River in four states, advo­cates for clean water and edu­cates res­i­dents about the river ecosys­tem. The CRC is based in Greenfield, Massachusetts. Its river stew­ard for Connecticut, Rhea Drozdenko, said that migra­to­ry fish are a valu­able part of the river’s health. These include the sea lam­prey, shad, river her­ring, and American eel.

These fish spend part of their life in the Connecticut River and then they spend part of their life out in the Long Island Sound or in the Atlantic Ocean,” Drozdenko said. “Those fish are real­ly impor­tant to our Connecticut River sys­tem because they bring back all these real­ly impor­tant ocean nutri­ents.”

Despite the work by the Metropolitan District Comission to improve the qual­i­ty of waste­water for Hartford res­i­dents, com­bined sewer over­flows still occur and can have severe envi­ron­men­tal impacts.

Combined sewer over­flows (CSOs), car­ry­ing untreat­ed human waste, other house­hold waste, and runoff from roads, are dis­charged into trib­u­taries like the Park River, which then join the Connecticut River. Although sewage treate­ment removes a lot of the nitro­gen, the over­flows con­tain nitro­gen and phos­pho­rus and can cause algae blooms. Algae feed off nutri­ents and can grow in great num­bers. Eventually the algae must die, and when it does, the process of decom­po­si­tion draws out oxy­gen from the water, leav­ing lit­tle for other wildlife like native fish.

The Connecticut Department of Energy & Environmental Protection maps pub­lic lakes, ponds and areas where fish­ing is allowed. Local fish­er­men may use these pub­lic bod­ies of water for recre­ation­al pur­pos­es, but these water bod­ies may be trib­u­taries, in which CSOs enter.

“Sewage con­tains a lot of nutri­ents. We eat nutri­ents and we get rid of them, nutri­ents like nitro­gen and phos­pho­rus. Nitrogen and phos­pho­rus are real­ly impor­tant for the envi­ron­men­tal life cycle, all plants need it. However, when it’s exces­sive, when there’s too much, it real­ly caus­es prob­lems,” Drozdenko said.

“You might not think that sewage in the water can even­tu­al­ly [lead to fish kills]. After all, these dif­fer­ent steps lead to fish kills, but it can. It’s just all of these down­stream effects,” she said.

The CRC tests water qual­i­ty week­ly from June through August each year to give res­i­dents a sense of whether the water is safe for swim­ming and boat­ing.

Although raw sewage can cause fish deaths, con­t­a­m­i­nants with­in the water can lead to con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed food and infec­tions for humans. Biomagnification is the process in which con­t­a­m­i­nants can com­pound them­selves in the food chain.

A com­mon exam­ple of this phe­nom­e­non is mer­cury in cer­tain ocean fish. Smaller organ­isms can absorb mer­cury through the water and other sed­i­ments, when those organ­isms are eaten, and then those ones are also eaten by big­ger fish, the mer­cury remains and becomes more con­cen­trat­ed down the line.

By the time the food chain reach­es some species humans eat — like salmon or tuna — the mer­cury reach­es high­er, poten­tial­ly dan­ger­ous lev­els. This same con­cept can be applied to sev­er­al con­t­a­m­i­nants with­in sewage from CSOs.

Map of fish­ing areas: https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/e02d8026889042c7aa2d71be67a72b9c


TOP IMAGE: American shad swim upriv­er every spring to spawn in the Connecticut River. Photo cour­tesy of Bill Byrne/ Massachusetts Wildlife

  • Environment

ABOUT THIS PROJECT

Eight journalism students at the University of Connecticut spent three months reporting on the combined sewer overflow repair project in Hartford and getting to know some of the real-life, sometimes devastating impact this pollution has exacted on the people who have endured it for decades.

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