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History | Membership | Officers | Profiles | Meetings & Events | Newsletters | Education | Links WHAT'S NEW?The 2013 Spring Meeting Final Program Schedule and AbstractsThe 2013 Virginia Chapter of the American Fisheries Society SupportersMeeting Registration Form (Excel)
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Marcellus Shale in Virginia |
"Teachers & Students" Page including The Shenandoah Valley Landowners Guide |
"Calendar" Page The "Winter" 2012 Newsletter (pdf) |
Virginia's abundant waters support a great diversity of aquatic organisms, including 220 species of self-sustaining fishes. Some waters, such as the Clinch and Holston Rivers in southwest Virginia, possess some of the greatest concentrations of uncommon non-game fishes and mollusks in the world.
Biologists survey the Lake Orange fishery using trap nets
However, the integrity of many Virginia waters are jeopardized by the state's growing human population. Despite improvements in wastewater treatment technology, the capacities of some waters to dilute waste are overburdened. Still others exhibit reduced oxygen inputs or are heavily silted due to poor land use practices.
The degradation of aquatic habitats in the Commonwealth has adversely affected our living resources: state and federal authorities have now listed 20 fishes and 40 aquatic invertebrates as threatened or endangered species in Virginia.