Society Says Carp Fence Is Good First Step For Smelly, Dirty Lagoon
An environmental group is supporting efforts by The District of Coldstream to improve the water quality in the Kalavista Lagoon.
The Society For the Protection of Kalamalka Lake did a baseline study of the murky and often smelly, water body on the east side of Kalamalka Lake by Kalavista Drive near Alexander’s Pub.
One part of the study focused on minnow trapping and seine netting which organizers say revealed “an abundance of juvenile non-salmonid fish species, with over 4,300 fish from nine different species.”
“A noteworthy capture was the chiselmouth chub, a blue-listed (vulnerable) species known to inhabit Okanagan Lake but not previously reported in Kalamalka Lake.
Approximately 60 large common carp were observed in the lagoon in May. Common carp are an introduced species known to alter shallow lakes and ponds across North America by uprooting vegetation as they feed. The lack of plant roots to bind the sediment in the Kalavista Lagoon results in cloudy water when waves, waterfowl or carp disturb the water column,” says Simone Runyan, the project lead.











