New Delhi, Jul 8 (PTI) The Delhi government has set up an 11-member committee to probe the incident of mass fish deaths in Delhi's Najafgarh drain and one of the areas it is focusing on is fertiliser pollution, officials said on Friday.

The committee includes members from the Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC), Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), Revenue Department, Forest and Wildlife Department and Animal Husbandry Department.

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"We have collected water samples from several spots and these are being tested to ascertain the concentration of dissolved oxygen, heavy metals, ammonia, nitrates and phosphates... There is a possibility of fertiliser runoff from the agricultural fields (in nearby villages)," a panel member told PTI on condition of anonymity.

"Some fish have been collected for dissection. The report will be available in three-four days," the member said.

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Another panel member explained that nitrogen and phosphorus pollution can run off from agricultural fields into drains, lakes and rivers and can cause algal blooms.

"As algae blooms, it depletes the water of oxygen and creates a dead zone, killing aquatic plants and animals," he said.

A senior DPCC official said the test results of the water samples collected from the drain on Sunday morning have arrived. The report has been handed over to the committee which will correlate it with their findings.

According to officials, a huge number of fish have mysteriously died in the upstream stretch of the Najafgarh drain along the Delhi-Haryana border.

Residents in the nearby Jhuljhuli village said fish in a pond in their village, around 200 meters from the drain, have also died.

The fish have died only in a five-kilometre upstream stretch of the drain between Rawta village in Delhi and Dhansa dam in Haryana.

No such incident has been reported at Najafgarh Jheel, the second largest water body in Delhi-NCR after the Yamuna.

Local residents said they have never seen something of this sort in the past.

The Najafgarh drain enters Delhi near Dhansa village and flows into the Yamuna. It is the largest drain in Delhi and accounts for around 60 per cent of the wastewater discharged from the capital into the river.

(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)