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PFOS Fish Consumption Advisory Issued for Occoquan Watershed

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Summary

The Virginia Department of Health has issued a fish consumption advisory for the Occoquan watershed due to elevated PFOS levels detected in largemouth bass and bluegill sunfish. Fish tissue samples collected from March 2024 through September 2025 showed PFOS concentrations exceeding safe thresholds for long-term human consumption. Affected localities include Fairfax, Prince William, Fauquier, and Manassas.

Published by VDH on vdh.virginia.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

VDH has issued a fish consumption advisory for the Occoquan watershed following detection of elevated PFOS (perfluorooctane sulfonate) levels in largemouth bass and bluegill sunfish. The advisory establishes do-not-eat restrictions for largemouth bass in the Occoquan River and Occoquan Reservoir, and two-meals-per-month limits for largemouth bass and bluegill sunfish from Broad Run, Bull Run, Cub Run, and South Run. Fish tissue samples collected from March 2024 through September 2025 informed these recommendations.

Consumers who fish in the affected waterways should adhere to the advisory limits or avoid consuming fish from these areas to reduce exposure to PFOS, a persistent environmental contaminant. Localities in Fairfax, Prince William, Fauquier, and Manassas are directly impacted by these recommendations.

What to do next

  1. Do not eat largemouth bass from the Occoquan River and Occoquan Reservoir
  2. Limit consumption of largemouth bass and bluegill sunfish to no more than 2 meals per month in specified tributaries
  3. A meal is defined as 8 ounces of fish

Archived snapshot

Apr 15, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

April 14, 2026
Media Contact: Brookie Crawford, brookie.crawford@vdh.virginia.gov

Virginia Health Officials Issue Fish Consumption Advisory for Occoquan Watershed
Contaminants Identified in Bluegill Sunfish, Largemouth Bass

RICHMOND, Va. – Effective immediately, the Virginia Department of Health (VDH) is issuing a fish consumption advisory for the Occoquan watershed due to elevated perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) levels in specific fish species. The affected species include largemouth bass and bluegill sunfish.

This advisory includes the Occoquan River, the Occoquan Reservoir, Broad Run, Bull Run, Cub Run and South Run.

The blue icons signify the locations where a two meals/months fish consumption advisory is in place for the bluegill sunfish and largemouth bass. Whereas the red icons signify where a Do Not Eat fish consumption advisory is in place for the largemouth bass.

Fish tissue sample results collected from March 2024 through September 2025 show PFOS levels in largemouth bass and bluegill sunfish exceed the amount considered safe for long-term human consumption.

VDH advises not eating largemouth bass from the Occoquan River and Occoquan Reservoir. The advisory covers the tidal portion below the Occoquan River from the Occoquan Reservoir dam downstream to Occoquan Bay including Belmont Bay and the backwaters of the Occoquan Reservoir on the Bull Run arm near Hemlock Overlook Regional Park and just upstream of Davis Ford Road on the Occoquan River arm down to the water supply dam of the Fairfax County Water Authority. Localities impacted are Fairfax and Prince William.

VDH advises eating no more than two fish meals per month of largemouth bass from Broad Run from the outlet of Lake Manassas downstream to the confluence with Cedar Run; Bull Run from the I-66 bridge downstream to the backwaters of the Occoquan Reservoir on the Bull Run arm near Hemlock Overlook Regional Park; and South Run from the outlet of Lake Brittle downstream to the confluence with Lake Manassas (Broad Run). Localities impacted are Fairfax, Fauquier, Manassas, and Prince William. A meal is defined as eight ounces of fish.

VDH advises eating no more than two fish meals per month of bluegill sunfish from the Occoquan Reservoir from the backwaters of the Occoquan Reservoir on the Bull Run arm near Hemlock Overlook Regional Park and just upstream of Davis Ford Road on the Occoquan River arm down to the water supply dam of the Fairfax County Water Authority; Broad Run from the outlet of Lake Manassas downstream to the confluence with Cedar Run; Bull Run from the I-66 bridge downstream to the backwaters of the Occoquan Reservoir on the Bull Run arm near Hemlock Overlook Regional Park; Cub Run from the confluence with Elklick Run downstream to the confluence with Bull Run; and South Run from the outlet of Lake Brittle downstream to the confluence with Lake Manassas (Broad Run). Localities impacted are Fairfax, Fauquier, Manassas, and Prince William.

| **** | Bluegill Sunfish

| Largemouth Bass

|
| Occoquan River/Reservoir | ≤ 2 Meals/Month | No Meals |
| Broad Run | ≤ 2 Meals/Month | ≤ 2 Meals/Month |
The health effects of PFOS exposure can include increased cholesterol or changes in liver enzymes. It can also lower antibody response to some vaccines. It can cause pregnancy-induced hypertension and preeclampsia, and a decrease in birth weight.

Fish consumption advisories alert people to contaminants present in affected fish species. They do not prohibit people from eating fish. Children and women who are pregnant or who may become pregnant have an increased health risk. Nursing mothers and young children should not eat fish from this advisory area.

Currently, this advisory area poses no health risk for recreational activities. Water activities like boating can continue in the advisory area.

Cleaning or cooking fish does not remove or reduce PFOS. To reduce potential harmful effects, VDH recommends the following precautions:

  • Eat smaller, younger fish (within the legal limits). Younger fish are less likely to contain harmful levels of contaminants.
  • Eat fewer or smaller servings of fish.
  • Try to eat different species of fish from a variety of sources (i.e., different creeks, rivers and streams). For more information, visit the VDH Fish Consumption Advisory page.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
VDH
Published
April 14th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Public health authorities
Industry sector
4831 Maritime & Shipping
Activity scope
Fish consumption Public health advisory
Geographic scope
Virginia US-VA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Environmental Protection

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