A few years ago, scientists started identifying a potentially major culprit in the dramatic decline of the coho salmon fishery — a chemical known as “6PPD-quinone,” a byproduct of a chemical used in automotive tires.Throughout the course of their life, tires deposit the precursor of this chemical everywhere they travel. This precursor degrades into 6PPD-q and enters the water system, killing coho in particular — a protected species under the Endangered Species Act — with great efficiency. Now, a new study from Humboldt Waterkeeper, conducted in Eureka and Arcata throughout the last few months, shows that you don’t need a huge, dense car population to generate potentially lethal concentrations of 6PPD-q — regular old parking lots seem to do it just fine.Jennifer Kalt, executive director of Humboldt Waterkeeper, told the Outpost that her organization received a grant last year to test how much of the chemical can be found in parking lot runoff water, which — in most places — drains directly into an estuary or the bay.Kalt and her colleagues collected runoff water from two Cal Poly Humboldt parking lots in late October 2024, and then from the parking lots of Costco and Target in Eureka in April of this year.“We basically wanted to start at the source see how bad it is coming out of the parking lot,” Kalt said.The samples were sent off to Weck Laboratories for analysis, and the results showed high levels of the chemical — 130 nanograms per liter in the two Cal Poly Humboldt parking lots, and 340 ng/L and 430ng/L in the Costco and Target parking lots, respectively. (See the lab reports here and here.)The “median lethal dose” of the chemical, for juvenile coho, is believed to be around 95 ng/L.Keep Reading